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VOL LXVII NO 58 STORRS. CONNECT!-JT SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 UTO Reaffirms Housing Selectivity r-

By STEVE FAGIN sisting of coffees and dinner parties would still be held in this manner. The only differencewould be the houses could Features Editor would be open to all students from Feb. 2 to Mar. 3. not directly choose new members. In the past, houses were able to send This year's rush procedures for the During this period, Foster said, in- dividual houses could either discourage a list uf persons they wanted in heir United Tower's Organization (UTO) will houses to the Department of Residence not be Influenced by President Babbdlge's or encourage prospective members to sign up for their bouses by telling rus- Hall Living. These persons would then Housing .Committee's recommendations be admitted to that house. to abolish selectivity, according to a hees what the house has to offer. Should the Board of Trustees ap- Pending the Board's decision, new spokesman for the UTO. members will be able to sign up for the William Foster, this year's UTO rush prove the committee's recommendations (Foster speculated they would), rush house they choose to live in and would chairman, said an informal rush con- be admitted in the order they signed up. Individual houses have the option whether they choose to have their rush system set up in this fashion. Ir- ller this semester, Sherman House voted to take new members by an undiscrtra- inatory lottery system. Foster said that persons who were against the committee's recommenda- tions were doing nothing about it, so the Board's opinion would be that most stu- dents are in favor of them. The UTO plans to print a rush book- let before Feb. 2 to make clear how each house plans to conduct its rush. Nixon Talks Tonight on War

WASHINGTON ~ (AP) — The White House has announced that President Nixon will make a broadcast address to- night (at 6 p.m., EST), to give another report on Vietnam. The President's talk Is expected to Include announcement of an additional withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Vietnam. White House news secretary Ronald Ziegler announced the time of the Pres- ident's talk yesterday. He described it as an updating of Nixon's November 3rd^ address on Vietnam in which the Pres-"~ ldent outlined his aims and programs for achieving peace. The President probably will speak for no more than five minutes tonight. His address will be carried live over radio and television. Nixon has let It be known that he will announce in the near future anaddiclonal quota for troop withdrawals. It could be in addition to the 25,000 - man pull-out announced In June and the 35,000 mm withdrawal announced In September. Withdrawals actually have been al- lowed to exceed, by several thousand men, the 60,000 total announced. NEW YORK - (AP) — RepubUcan Senator Charles Goodell believes there has been a cover-up at high levels of the alleged My Lai massacre. After an interview on WABC - TVs "Eyewitness" program, the Senator said he does not think there Is any ques- tion 'someone has been covering up" the reported atrocity and "probably at a fairly high level." He said soldiers accused of the al- leged massacre might have been "scape- goats" carrying out orders. "If the evidence shows that they should be charged," he said, "It Is im- portant to see that the colonels, majors and generals at a higher level are also charged." Goodell said evidence showed the al- leged coverup did not reach cabinet lev- el.

Tomorrow's Issue of The Campus will Bob Staak (24) stretches full length attempting to block a Boston College shot be the last until February 4. Anyone In UConn's 77-72 victory over the Eagles. Staak took to the shot himself and having newsworthy Information which scored 17 points as the Huskies beat B.C. for the first time since 1965. Tom must be printed before this date must M cCrocklin (40) eyes the action from the background but only for a moment. M<> bring It to The Campus Newsroom, Crocklin spent most of the evening eyeing the basket as he scored 22 points CM SU 113, before 3 p.m. today. nine of 11 attempts. It was UConn's fourth consecutive win, much to the delight of 4,490 persons. Perspective Section II Apollo Program le-trtex»s to -fclm.

QUmturtirist iatlg (Eampua Reply to Mr. Sasson Serving Storrs Since 1896 To the editor: tice for an "advisory opinion" theirs and will always be. I would like to assure Mr. by the Court were rejected or Respectfully, Sasson that facts I stated in my ignored by the Assembly? Labib Abdunur letter of 12/4/69 were not from 11. That, when the Assembly Palestinian Refugee SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 an Egyptian or Syrian History began to experience "Second book but are basic facts teat thoughts" over the matter and Response to Lottery Inquiry could be checked with the U.N. convened for its second special official records and any history session in 1948, it failed to re- To the Editor: book. affirm the 1947 recommendation It Is probably foolish to try Do you know Mr. Sasson that: tor the partition of Palestine — to analyze the recent draft lot- 1. When the Palestine Pro- thus destroying whatever dubious tery results In a short letter, blem was created by Britain in legality that recommendation for but the following remarks may be 1917, more than 90% o' the pop- the establishment of a Jewish helpful nevertheless. Presumably The Anti- American Press ulation of Palestine were Arabs? State had had? the letter writers • and others - (Moslems or Christians, like my- feel that the order of dates re- self). 12. That tee 'Jewish State* sulting from the recent draft lot- tery Is 'Nonrandom". Before I Perhaps it was our history classes In elementary sc'iool; perhaps 2. That more than half of was planted at the polnt-of-Inter- the Jews living In Palestine at section of Asia and Africa with- address myself to this question, it may be helpful to point out It was our pre-adolescent viewing of Wilt D-sney's «Davy Crockett" that time were recent Immi- out the free approval of any Mid- grants, who had come to Palestine dle Eastern, Asian or African the following. Whether the pre- sent draft order is "random* or films; perhaps It was a.iy one >'. a thousand dreams Of reflections the preceding decades In order country except the Union of South to escape persecution in Europe Africa, Itself ruled by an alien not, as long as It was not ar- ranged to favor knowingly any planted by older and wiser Americans In the soil of our growing mem- not in tee Arab Countries. minority? 3. That the Arabs of Pa- 13. That Israel remained, specific group of Individuals, it will insure as fair or unfair a ories, but we find that somehow we seem to hare been given a false lestine at that time owned 97.9% ever since its inception, a total of the land, while Jews (native stranger in the emerging world draft order as any other of the 366x365...x2-l possible orders. impression of what being an Amorican means. Palestinians and recent Immi- of Afro-Asia; and that Israel has grants together) owned only 2.5% been refused admission to any in- Nauter in determining a person's birthday takes care of all the We have labored under the idea that being a citizen of a Demo- of the land? ter-state conference of Asian, 4. That, during 30 years African, Afro-Asian, or Non-Ali- randomization teat Is required. As a consequence, tee question of cratic nation, in fact of the very nation that first took democracy tor of British occupation and rule, gned States ever held? the Zionists were able to pur- 14. That, since tee General whether tee present draft order is random or not is simply an its ideal and attempted from birth to live with that ideal, with its chase only 3.5% of the land of Armistice Agreements were Palestine, In spite of the encou- signed in 1949, Israel has main- exercise in statistics. To start teen, strictly speak- faults and Its demand? as wall as with Its rights, that it was iiach ragement of the British Govern- tained an agressive policy of wag- ment? ... and that much of ing military attacks across the lns it is Incorrect to say teat tee given order of dates is ran- citizen's obligation and duty to examine and criticize the national the land was transferred to Zi- Armistice Demarcation Lines, onist bodies by the British Gov- repeatedly invading the terri- dom or nonrandom. What may or may not have been random is the policies of that nation. ernment directly and was not sold tories of the neighboring Arab by Arab owners? States . . And that Israel has method that was used to draw cap- sules containing the draft dates Now we find that such examination, such criticism is labeled, out 5. That, therefore, when Bri- been duly rebuked, censured, or tain passed the Palestine condemned for these military at- from the glass bowl. Random- ness of selection requires tho- of hand, as anti-American. Perhaps such labeling Is Just. Perhaps Problem to the United Nations in tacks by tee Security Council or 1947, Zionists owned no more the General Assembly of tee U.N. rough shuffling of all capsules. There is some statistical evi- the test of a newspaper has become its obligation to present govern- than 6% of tee total land area on 11 occasions — 5 times by the of Palestine? Security Council and 6 times by dence teat any shuffling that might have taken place was not suffi- ment policy In a good light always, to present capitalism In a good 6. That, notwithstanding these the General Assembly? facts, the General Assembly 15. That not other country ciently thorough. Specifically to answer the letter, the rank cor- light always, and to present wiiatever political beliefs, such as Com- of the U.N. recommended that a In the world, whether member of "Jewish State" be established In the U.N. or non-mom'>er, has relation between the order of months in the year and the num- munism, that have been labeled "dangerous* by the present govern- Palestine? ... and teat the been so frequently condemned by Assembly granted that proposed the U.N. ber of draft dates under 181 in a month is highly indicative ment administration, In a bad light always. ■State" about 54% of the total 16. That no Arab State has area of the country? ever been condemned by any or- of nonrandomness. On the other hand, as I always try to impress This idea we do not choose to believe; this course we do not choose 7. That Israel Immediately gan of the U.N. for military at- occupied 80.48% of the total land tacks upon Israel (or any other on my students in Statistics 210, it is extremely bad statistics to to follow, and this test we do not expect to pass. area of Palestine? State)? 8. That this territorial ex- 17. That, besides expelling let the data suggest a hypothesis and then test it using tee same American newsme.i have setup a series of riles calling for separa- pansion took place, for the most the bulk of tee Arab Inhabitants part, before 15 May 1948: be- of Palestine, and besides con- data. A much better procedure in this case would be to carry tion of news from opinion by clear labels This tradition we fore tee formal end of tee Bri- stantly attacking the neighboring tish mandate and the withdraw- Arab States, Israel has also con- out the appropriate test a year al of British forces from Pa- sistently harrassed the U.N. ob- from now using the draft data choose to follow,,- not because we are so obligated by law but because lestine, before the entry of Arab servers and other personnel sta- for 197L armies to protect Palestinian A- tioned along tee Armistice De- we find It the most senseable course. rabs, and before the Arab-Israeli marcation Lines: It has assas- Gottfried E. Noeteer war? sinated the first U.N. Mediator Department of Statistics 9. That the 1947 recom- and his military aide; it has de- mendation of the General Assem- In the words of a man who we feel is as anti-American as any who tained some truce observers; It The Basic Issue of Man bly In favor of the creation of has militarily occupied and ille- a Jewish State" was outside the walk the earth today, "Let there be no mistake about that." gally searched tee Headquarters To tee Editor: competence of the Assembly un- of U.N. personnel; and It has boy- The basic issue of man Is the der the Charter of the United cotted meetings of the Mixed Ar- right to live, not exist but live. Nations? mistice Commissions? . . . A tree lives, a lag-pole exists, 10. That all attempts by the Finally Mr. Sasson, El-Fateh both are made of wood but, there's Arab States and other Asian coun- actions do not differ from the a big difference between tee two. Black Capitalism tries to have the Assembly sub- Zionist "irgun" or "Haganah* We, tee slaves and tools of the mit tee Question of "constitution- terrorist groups actions except rich capitalist pigs have been ality* of its recomr.i?ndatlon to to one respect. El-Fateh is fight- stripped and molded in such a the International Court of Jus- ing to regain a country teat was way so as to become highly com- Richard M. Nixon, while campaigning for the Presidency, sail petent machines for tee rich pig the answer to racism In America was a program of 'Black Capital- to use for profit We no longer ism." live as human beings, as men and Only one step In this direction has been taken by the Nixon admin- women, we exist as things and a istration during its eleven months In office. thing Is neuter, no feelings, emo- tions, thoughts, a thing Just occu- That step was a plan for a 'roadshow" to demonstrate "the admin- pies space. istration's commitment to minority entrepreneurshlp." Well dig this, tee Black Pan- The show, was designed to tour large cities In the United States ther Party and tee United Front with a well trained public relations staff, showing off two or three Against Fascism Is a group of prominent black men who had been successful In business long before men and women who live and will Nlxo.i hit the campaign trail. A public relations consultant was hired die not as things but as human at a fee of $10? a day to develop visual aids, press kits, and brochures beings. And for every one of us for the show. teat is murdered at the hands of these fascist pigs 10 more men The one positive Idea on Black Capitalism to come from the Nixon and womeu will take our place and administration was a Minority Enterprise Development Corporation, fight the pig, until tee day ar- that was supposed to raise money and lend it to small, minority owned rives when all men and women businesses. will live not exist. We do not reject tee idea of Black Capitalism out of hand. Although some readers would urge that all capitalism Is evil (as indeed others All Power to tee People would urge that all Communism Is evil) we feel that either may be Seize tee Time acceptable so long as they offer real help for their followers, and so Free All Political Prisoners long as what help they offer does not deny basic freedoms to the people U.F.A.F. benefited. Wa do say that the Nixon administration's program of Black Cap- italism 'as offered no help to anyone, anywhere, except to the public Special relations men who pad their wallets with government dollars at the expense of all tax paying Americans. Conneticut Published daily while the University is in session, except Saturdays and Sundays. Second class postage paid at Storrs, Connecticut. Daily Campus Member of The Associated Collegiate Press. Accepted for national advertising by The National Advertising Service. Editorial and Christmas Edition Business Offices located In the Student Union Building. University of Connecticut at Storrs. SUBSCRIBER: Associated Press News -ESstrz. Service. Subscription Rates: $3.50 per semester; $5.50 per year. Tomorrow Return Notification of unclaimed deliveries to Connecticut Daily 'Doei that we get to live on a houseboat?' Campus. University of Connecticut. Storrs. Connecticut 06268.

.';.•..■'.■'.. .'..'. DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 $ Alcatraz Goes Back To The Indians SPANISH CLUB will hold o Chri., ISOLATED? Open Meetina. Every. mas party Dec 15 8pm. Plenty of pa- one welcome to foster a feeling of • llo sangrio, and music1 If you would life on campus. Tonight 7:30. Com- mons 313. A change depends on You! tide to attend or would like more infor pltose contact Alicia 429.4012 or Mary Faculty, Adult'. Residents in sur- SAN FRANCISCO -- (AP) -- It COJW be that barracks. That's the year when another band of 429-7651. rounding UConn communities: UConn somciiody just msie this up. Yet even though it's Indians got there « but not willingly. A handful o' YOGA INDEPENDENT STUDY - 3 Students Agencies has students ovo.l- only a legend, there's enough reality In It to bear rebellious chlers from the Great Plains was taken credit* Thurs 6pm Lutheran Church able for your working pleasures. If there to live out their years in lonely detention. grid Mon Dec 15, 3pm in Manchester you nmed a er 19, a band went spoons. All but one disappeared. Authorities spe- ITALIAN CLUB will hold their onnua SILENT PEACE VIGIL- Mondays ashore. It was the striking force representing tribes culated they drowned in the strong tid»s. The one Christmas Party on Mon Dec 15 8om prisoner who swam 'o the mainland was picked up SU2I7. 11:45-1:00 n tront of library. Stand which dem? id that Alcatrai'.oe turned over to them To? silently for Peace (2-60 minutes' and a National Indian Center. T.ney claim ihe Island exhausted. HILLEL: new selection of unique help us to help end an ugly wor. Is under an 1868 treaty which they contend, entitles The most serious break out attemp' happened in posters have just arrived. Black light an hour of standing If) hopes of on the Sioux Indians to any unused Federal Government 1946. Convicts grabbed guards and guns and tool: posters Included. All proceeds go to hour less of killing too much too ask? property.. over one cellblock. Marines were sent in. They United Jewish Appeal. Everyone is welcome to participate. The last time the Yssociated Press checKed, fired mortar shells into the block. The uprising there were more than 503 Indians on the island. collapsed ifter ihroe ringleaders were killed. That's twice the prison population wnen th9 rock WAS Aicatraz was returned to the birds in 1903. The left to the tidjs and ihe waves in 19G3, This -was Government said it WU too expensive to run, and too costly to repair the 54-year-old main buildings. Ride needed to Hartford or Bradley after almost two centuries as a bird refuge, then a Will the young man who was wearing field before II am Wed. Call 429-4669. fortress, and finally a prison for the toughest con- Now thai the Indians have invaded the rock and are the lovely black fur jacket at the 10 ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bed- victs. holding pow-wows on it, a care-taker remarks: o'clock moss on Sun. please call 429-0311. rm. opt. at Woodhaven Park. Good The Army look it away from the birds 115 years •Maybe the old Island wasn't meant to be aban- place to study. Nice surroundings RIDE WANTED: Two girls desire ago. Alcatraz Island was fortified, gun ware mounted, doned." rid. to Colo, or anywhere In the All utilities fum. for $82 50 mo. and ammunition stored. By 1869, it was a disciplinary Mld-wett semester break. Anytime Grad student preferred. Call Dave 429-5064. alter Jon. 17. Coll 429.2324 or 429- 7039. Will share expenses. ANTIQUES: Gift for Knot, Mulberry RIDE WANTED: to So. Jersey or House Wormwood Hill Rd. Mansfield Phlla. area, on Wed. Dec. 17. Coll Center off Rt. 89 Sundays or phone THE NATIONWIDE SERVICE - SPECIALIZING IN ENGINEERING , ACCOUNTING, Sue 429-0387. 429-4114. Will the person who got the number "68 RENAULT R-10. PEPPY LIT- of the car that did damage to a black SALES/MARKETING MANUFACTURING AND MANAGEMENT TRAINEES TLE RED SEDAN WITH RECLINING 1 1 Secorl,y SEATS, DISC. BRAKES, MICHELIN SlMth.. iEo*

COME ONE- COME ALL CALL 547-0900 FOR IMMEDIATE APPOINTMENT OR COME IN DURING VACATION Community Candle Light Christmas Vespers

7 P. M Turns, Doc. 16 of the

Stnrrs Congregational Church offer the service there will be caroling followed by F-O-R-T-U-N-E ^^7

Cider and doughnuts I i Trmo Trimming

Singing Interviews 9-1, Mon. thurThurs.

in the lounge at the Parish House 60 Washington St., Suite 712, 7 547-0900 Capitol Area - Attached Parking

■&*+*+*+»&*+-^ * lette

(Eanmctxttxt lattg flkmpua Reply to Mr. Sotson Serving Storrs Since 1896 To the editor: tice for an "advisory opinion* theirs and will always be. I would like to assure Mr. by the Court were rejected or Respectfully, Sasson that facts I stated in my Ignored by the Assembly? Labib Abdunur letter of 12/4/69 were not from 11. That, when the Assembly Palestinian Refugee SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 an Egyptian or Syrian History began to experience "second book but are basic facts that thoughts" over the matter and Response to Lottery Inquiry could be checked with the U.N. convened for Its second special official records and any history session in 1948, it failed to re- To the Editor: book. affirm the 1947 recommeiKijuion R is probably foolish to try Do you know Mr. Sasson that: tor the partition of Palestine — to analyze the recent draft lot- 1. When the Palestine Pro- thus destroying whatever dubious tery results in a short letter, blem was created by Britain in legality that recommendation for but the following remarks may be The Anti- American Press 1917, more than 90% of the pop- the establishment of a Jewish helpful nevertheless. Presumably ulation of Palestine were Arabs? State had had? the letter writers • and others - (Moslems or Christians, like my- feel that the order of dates re- self). 12. That the "Jewish State" sulting from the recent draft lot- tery Is "Nonrandom". Before I Perhaps It was our history classes in elementary sc'.aol; perhaps 2. That more than half of was planted at the pnint-of-inter- the Jews living in Palestine at section of Asia and Africa with- address myself to this question, It may be helpful to point out It was our pre-adolescent viewing of Wilt Disney's *Davy Crockett* that time were recent immi- out the free approval of any Mid- grants, who had come to Palestine dle Eastern, Asian or African the following. Whether the pre- sent draft order Is "random" or films; perhaps It was 3-iy one )'. a thousand dreams or reflections the preceding decades in order country except the Union of South to escape persecution In Europe Africa, Itself ruled by an alien not, as long as it was not ar- ranged to favor knowingly any planted by older and wiser Americans In the soil of our growing mem- not In the Arab Countries. minority? 3. ^ That the Arabs of Pa- specific group of individuals, it 1 13. That Israel remained, ories, but we find that somehow we seem to hare been given a false lestine at that time owned 97.5% ever since its inception, a total will Insure as fair or unfair a of the land, while Jews (native stranger in the emerging world draft order as any other of the impression of what being an Amorlcan means. Palestinians and recent immi- of Afro-Asia; and that Israel has 366x385...x2-l possible orders. grants together) owned only 2.5% been refused admission to any in- Nauter in determining a person's birthday takes care of all the We have labored under the idea that being a citizen of a Demo- of the land? ter-stete conference of Asian, 4. That, during SO years African, Afro-Asian, or Non-Ali- randomization that Is required. As a consequence, the question of cratic nation, In fact of the very nation that first took democracy for of British occupation and rule, gned States ever held? the Zionists were able to pur- 14. That, since the General whether the present draft order is random or not is simply an its Ideal and attempted from birth to live with mat ideal, with its chase only 3.5% of the land of Armistice Agreements were Palestine, In spite of the encou- signed In 1949, brael has main- exercise in statistics. To start then, strictly speak- faults and Its demands as well as with its lights, that it was oach ragement of the British Govern- tained an agresslve policy of wag- ment? . . . and that much of 'lng military attacks across the 1ns it is incorrect to say that the given order of dates is ran- citizen's obligation and duty to examine and criticize the national the land was transferred to Zi- Armistice Demarcation Lines, onist bodies by the British Gov- repeatedly Invading the terri- dom or nonrandom. What may or policies of that nation. ernment directly and was not sold tories of the neighboring Arab may not have been random is the by Arab owners? States . . And that Israel has method that was used to draw cap- sules containing the draft dates Now we find mat such examination, such criticism Is labeled, oat 8. That, therefore, when Bri- been duly rebuked, censured, or tain passed the Palestine condemned tor these military at- from the glass bowl. Random- ness of selection requires tho- of hand, as anti-American. Perhaps such labeling Is Just. Perhaps Problem to the United Nations In tacks by the Security Council or 1947, Zionists owned no more the General Assembly oftheU.N. rough shuffling of all capsules. There is some statistical evi- the test of a newspaper has become its obligation to present govern- man 6% of the total land area on 11 occasions — 5 times by the of Palestine? Security Council and 6 times by dence that any shuffling that might have taken place was not suffi- ment policy in a good light always, to present capitalism In a good 6. That, notwithstanding these the General Assembly? facts, the General Assembly 15. That not other country ciently thorough. Specifically to answer the letter, the rank cor- light always, and to present whatever political beliefs, such as Com- of the U.N. recommended that a in the world, whether member of "Jewish State" be established in the U.N. or non-mom'er, has relation between the order of munism, that have been labeled "dangerous" by the present govern- Palestine? ... and that the been so frequently condemned by months in the year and the num- Assembly granted that proposed the U.N. ber of draft dates under 181 ment administration, in a bad light always. -State" about 54% of the total 16. That no Arab State has in a month is highly indicative area of the country? ever been condemned by any or- of nonrandomness. On the other This idea we do not choose to believe; this coarse we do not choose 7. That brael immediately gan of the U.N. for military at- hand, as I always try to impress occupied 80.48% of the total land tacks upon Israel (or any other on my students In Statistics 210, to follow, and this test we do not expect to pass. area of Palestine? State)? It is extremely bad statistics to 8. That this territorial ex- 17. That, besides expelling let the data suggest a hypothesis American newsmen have set up a series of riles calling for separa- pansion took place, for the most the bulk of the Arab Inhabitants and then test it using the same part, before 15 May 1948: be- of Palestine, and besides con- data. A much better procedure In this case would be to carry tion of news from opinion by clear labels This tradition we fore the formal end of the Bri- stantly attacking the neighboring tish mandate and the withdraw- Arab States, Israel has also con- out the appropriate test a year al of British forces from Pa- sistently harrassed the U.N. ob- from now using the draft data choose to follow.; not because we are so obligated by law but because lestine, before the entry of Arab servers and other personnel sta- forl97L armies to protect Palestinian A- tioned along the Armistice De- we find it the most senseable course. rabs, and before the Arab-Israeli marcation Lines: It has assas- Gottfried E. Noether war? sinated the first U.N. Mediator Department of Statistics 9. That the 1947 recom- and his military aide; it has de- mendation of the General Assem- m the words of a man who we feel Is as anti-American as any who tained some truce observers; It The Basic Issue of Man bly in favor of the creation of has militarily occupied and ille- a Jewish State" was outside the walk the earth today, "Let there be no mistake about that." gally searched the Headquarters To tee Editor: competence of the Assembly un- of U.N. personnel; and it has boy- The basic Issue of man is the der the Charter of the United cotted meetings of the Mixed Ar- tight to live, not exist but live. Nations? mistice Commissions?... A tree lives, a lag-pole exists, 10. That all attempts by the Finally Mr. Sasson, El-Fateh both are made of wood but, there's Arab States and other Asian coun- actions do not differ from the a big difference between the two. Black Capitalism tries to have the Assembly sub- Zionist "Irgun* or "Baganah* We, the slaves and tools of the mit the question of "constitution- terrorist groups actions except rich capitalist pigs have been ality" of its recommendation to In one respect. El-Fateh is fight- stripped and molded in such a the International Court of Jus- ing to regain a country that was way so as to become highly com- Richard M. Nixon, while campaigning for the Presidency, said petent machines for the rich pig the answer to racism In America was a program of "Black Capital- to use for profit. We no longer ism." live as human beings, as men and Only one step In this direction has been taken by the Nixon admin- women, we exist as things and a istration during its eleven months In office. thing Is neuter, nofeelings, emo- tions, thn.ijhts, a thing Just occu- That step was a plan for a "roadshow" to demo urtrate "the admin- pies space. istration's commitment to minority entrepreneurshlp." Well dig this, the Black Pan- The show, was designed to tour large cities in the United States ther Party and the United Front with a well trained public relations staff, showing off two or three Against Fascism Is a group of prominent black men who had been successful in business long before meu and women who live and will Nixon bit the campaign trail. A public relations consultant was hired die not as things but as human at a fee of $10? a day to develop visual aids, press kits, and brochures beings. And for every one of us tor the show. that is murdered at the bands of these fascist pigs 10 more men The one positive idea on Black Capitalism to come from the Nixon and womeu will take our place and administration was a Minority Enterprise Development Corporation, fight the pig, until the diy ar- that was supposed to raise money and lend It to small, minority owned rives when all men and women businesses. will live not exist. We do not reject the Idea of Black Capitalism out of hand. Although some readers would urge that all capitalism Is evil (as indeed others All Power to the People would urge that all Communism Is evil) we feel mat either may be Seize the Time acceptable so long as they offer real help for their followers, and so Free AU Political Prisoners long as what help they offer does not deny basic freedoms to the people U.F.A.F. benefited. We do say that the Nixon administration's program or Black Cap- italism '.as offered no help to anyone, anywhere, except to the public Special relations men who pad their wallets with government dollars at the expense of all tax paying Americans. Conneticut Published daily while the University is in session, except Saturdays and Sundays. Second class postage paid at Storrs, Connecticut. Daily Campus Member of The Associated Collegiate Press. Accepted for national advertising by The National Advertising Service. Editorial and Christmas Edition Business Offices located In the Student Union Building, University of Connecticut at Storrs. SUBSCRIBER: Associated Press News Service. Subscription Rates: $3.50 per semester; $5.50 per year. Return Notification of unclaimed deliveries to Connecticut Daily Tomorrow Campus, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06268.

. DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dee. 15, 1969 $

Alcatraz Goes Back To The Indians SPANISH CLUB will hold o Chri.,, ISOLATED? Open Meeting. Every- mos party Dec 15 8pm. Plenty of po- one welcome to foster a feeling of 1 life on campus. Tonight 7:30. Com- ello songrlo, and music If you would 1 nil* to attend or would like more infor mons 313. A chonge depends on You please contact Alicia 429.4012 or Mary Faculty, Adult-. Kesidents in sur- SAN FRANCISCO -- (AP) — It could be that barracks. That's the year when another band of 129-7651. rounding UConn communities: UConn somebody just m

One of the most critical decisions you will ever have to make will Involve your choice of a career. The Fed-up With The System? Job that you take upon comoletlon of your undergraduate or advanced degree will provide the foundation of your chosen profession. That first Job choice is really quite a big step and from our years of exper- Do Something about H ience in the placement of college graduates, we have found that th9 direction a persons' career takes is most often determined by the nature of his very first position. Because of this, and our concern to help you make the best start possible, wa strive to open as many TEACH A COURSE IN THE doors, In as many different fields, as we possibly can. We'll discuss your objectives and your qualifica- tions and we'll Introduce you to opportunities in the area of your choice. We'll also Introduce you to op- EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE portunities In areas you did not know existed. F-O-R-T-U-N-E Is an agency committed to the principle of career development and we will assist you MEETING JANUARY 8 In choosing a position which can best serve as a cornerstone for your future development. We're sure SCHOOL OF EDUCATION FACULTY LOUNGE 8 P.M. that you'll find our uniquely personalized approach both interesting and rewarding. You owe it to your- self and your future to see F-O-R-T-U-N-E first. FOR INFO 429-1797 429-1798

COME ONE- COME ALL CALL 547-0900 FOR IMMEDIATE APPOINTMENT OR COME IN DURING VACATION Community Candle Light Christmas Vespers

7 P. M. lues, Dec. 76 at the

Starrs Congregational Church Cy aftor me service ffcere will be caroling followed by F-O-R-T-U-N-E rH°a^X Cider and doughnuts

Tram Trimming

Singing Interviews 9-1, Mon. thur Thurs.

in the lounge at the Parish House 60 Washington St., Suite 712, 7 547-0900 Capitol Area - Attached Parking

|e^*e>iei'^'«ewe^*e'w>w#w#»ee

I iiiinne.unmia i- nut a brand nl mountain plow. It- .1 lira ml of I'ml, Kloyd. Cm trnr> to i- |>u ai pin ion. Cyru- Mt-Cormick iliil nol invcnl the \\.; . \V;. Kdn.ir llroughton did Ah heiny i- no f i int. It' the "Third Kar" ere: . . I inni ,■ Tin- i- ;i new IIAHYKS'I ■ in h:it I notlnnt to

I radii ioi ■ i . and nu inu. Think ■/'_ al.oul IIAKVKST .1 Mali In il ■ oni.thine in. ■!■ ami -iinnm 1 \ and I'm 11111 v ■ WasaWasa": niKi Wii-ii i- .111 away" whirl M aim] in .Inn. I In- twenty-!h ice year old mn-lei in (hi c nii-ni I'ai head I' tin Anthems hi Eden ■ •fill. IIAKVKS'I label With tin -upport and hack- Ih. I,;.. I: mhton Hand I thru KM I. Malcolm created i IT idc.ico fur niu-ii men and a inaiinyci ivho I i • i ^ .. 1 iiimn I 1'ioni uToiip- .all..I. "undcrurounil" and "c\pcri tin othci >>n IIAKVKST. tin Hn.uuhtoi Hal in. nt.il" In a -hurt time, IIAKVKST lia- hecim Iiievctl nly in Knulai I' -oinethinc of a family: a home lor qua lit \ nl ccau-cof tunes liki-."Dcnth of an Klct-tric< il ei irnrdc mti :. ol .ill kind-. IIAKVKST ...in.'- from Vou*ll hear a lot Kni; la lid. I lr re in tin- I S. n. now have a it I imp r

PINK FLOY J1 Our $22.95 Lister, with Runners. IVIAGUnri M

\V Shiriey& Dolly Collins

W.ranfurni.-I ibis lister in both II and 16 inch, "Anthems In Eden": S... l«H»i. II in. Ii, Mill, ln.tli wli.-.ln; weight. 17". Hi-. I'nci- »g£.05 Sh.ii ley and Dolly Collin- have collected trad'- No. 1-101. Irtineli, lioth ul I-.; weight,|« ; material from 1 pn-t. using medieval ii Wr r-r-,-i, .1.' !i,-., w.Trr.i-f,. r-, rok'. o,--."in!'"::-:-- 'l-~1U1er.il.ey :....„, jmui, which pru. wheel,or lioili.a- d.-ind V\In 11 -..lnl wi„..| i> u-ed, v "'«'s " i"»«|Ue experience: musii that has hcoii ,1 fprimj Mi.ipir i- ait.ich.d. |I..III.-I SI.«M>. if only called, •■primeval Kmdi.-h pop" Cnnsiiler the rein . .•no ul. .el is « iil.-.i. We claim for 1 1 li-i.r the follow- the -aehut. the .run,horn and racket:. 11' \ _ _ nevei heard them liefore. they're here now. ln>tru- WTA- ••.§1. lllolil in "Alll I.'-in in Kdell" PANAMA LIMITED JUG BAND 'Ummagumma": A l»n nnii'il -.id hy tin1 I'mk Klnyil, 0111' o Km land'- top irrolip- and al-n very popnlai in the I'nitl'd Stat.- I'mk Floyd create- a -ound that rould ho called, "c\t ra-tci 1 cst 11:.'" The croup he- lic\.- it- inu-ic should lie ii-.lu! and liviuu. It 1-. All that and the title. I'MMAC MMA. Wo don't know wllal it nicm- cither ipcrhnp-, two for the priec nl mic . The King of Cang Plows, y

4&S *M Alchemy": V ^IlTw There isn't iiMi ill. 1 IT 10up in tlie world thai sound / like The 'Third Kar Hand. 'They 11-e instruments Panama Limited Jug Band: Egyptian tahla. olioe. , viola, and . Name of the (rroup; name of the alhum. 'This yiuinir * I too net rash with order, no discount I The sound is unforgettable, hypn I Wtulo not make any iliscoimt on plows, but wn make The Third Kar Hand ha- plaved to hu ;

, . . • PERSPECTIVE SECTION II Monday, O.c. 15, 1969 J (fomwttrut Daily (ttamjMH

i ) r .^g _^IIBH ^H .... - - 1 ~' <4fl

w •^ TOr^ ■■ ■£. J ji * WJ* ■ i / J O/ u- 1 M k ^Jr <•*<** jm &fr.

> ^r A ft**J% 'ml >. Rlfli'sH i \> '• 3*7 Br ' ' ^ - ■ ^^* a- 4*2 •._' Av • r /I ' > Bto • W ."■*** * - , - • '* * -a- * _ *jj Lw 1 • ,:*. ~ 1 . «.$". ■•» ■ - ." * ■dr * Br' ^ .•"..-^ | ^1 h^* -*v -*--■ ML'i&< VIEWS ON THE APOLLO PROGRAM

Next Steps In Space

By Dr. Thomas 0. Pain* Administrator for NASA Mankind entered a new era at Tran- of perhaps a hundred scientists. we now commit ourselves as a nation. ? Just one development, have been of enor- quility Baa* - an era In which travel In the late 1970's we could establish mous benlflt. They provide more accurate will be reckoned not In thousands of on the moon a bass camp that could be My own belief Is that we should press data tor weather forecasts, aid mariners, miles bat In millions and billions. Space occupied for months or even years. toward to a balanced program - scientif- and aircraft pilots to axing their posit la an endless frontier for oar children ic and technological development as well tons, and give map makers hlthertl unob- and for all future generations. In the 1980's we could sand men to as exploration. Of coarse our goals and tainable details of the earths surface. In I believe that men will drive onward Mars - a | voyage that would test our the pace we strive to attain them, must the years ahead they will flndundiscwer- In the years ahead to Mars, to the moons knowledge and equipment tor travel to redlect our national will, and there are ed mineral deposits and sources of fresh of Jupiter, and to other new worlds In Venus and others planets later on. well-informed and reasonable men Who water; make global agricultural surveys oar solar system. Some of these destin- to addition to these manned ventures feel we should proceed more slowly. and detect diseased crops; and even help ations are attainable In this century, so- we will learn more about our solar sys- In the fight agalnsy pollution of air and me even within the next two decades. tem from unmanned probes. Several are It has been said that we should con- water. If we five fall rein to oar growing space already scheduled tor the 1970's. These centrate all oar resourses on our prob- And the conquest of space Is every capabilities, we can rapidly establish a Include flights to orbit Mars, and others lems hers at home. But I believe that thing lifting men's horlzens and spirits. bridge head in the heavens In the next to land there, and the first multiple-plan- It would be a tragedy to foreclose our Not only have global sattllltea brought dozen years. et flight, tor which the targets will be future In space. I believe that our Nat- nations closer, but « as Col. Frank Bor- In the mld-1970's, for example, we first Venus then Mercury. Ion can and must do these things simul- man*s warm reception in the Soviet Union could begin to assemble in earth orbit All these are exciting prospects. taneously • not just one at a time. showed - space achlevmente are crossing a permanent manned station. Gradually Bat they raise the most fundamental of Space exploration already has made the barriers that divide men on earth. enlarged. It would become the work site questions: To what goals in space should life better on earth. Satellites, to mention -E«erpt«d from tfio "Natlonol Geographic" EDGAR BROUGHTON What's WASA WASA Ummagumma IfejP^C Have To Do With Harvest?

I inningumma i- not a liraml ul mountain plow . It - a brand af Pink Klnyif. Con I rary to |><>|>u hi r < >pi n ion. Cyrus M<<'in nix 1% IIMI not invent the Wa-n W'n II Kdgar Krnughton diil. Alrheniy i- no fruit. It'- the "Third Kar" creating gold l>y inauie. Tin- i- a new IIARVKST -on-on that ha- nnthint to ilo with traditional notion- of reaping and sowing. Think ft aouuiahout n.-vaiIIARVKST 1..-1 .1- .ii.in'Malcolm■mi ii|«"docs: : .1-as -omrinsomething 1:1; u\AI Ul "• nice and siunniery and friendly. W3S3 W3S3 ". WIIMI Wa-n 1- K-kinio for "from fai away" v, • Anthems in Eden Malcolm .lone- i- the twenty-three year old mn-tcr in thi.- ca-e mean- far i\\n> ahead of theii tinii I of the IIARVKST label. With the support and hack- The Kdgar Hroughton H i-t> of time young | ing of KMI, Malcolm created a residence for music men and a nianugci who :- Kdgar's mom. I from groups called, "underground" and "c\pori- the other-on IIARVKST. the Hroughtoi Hand mental" In ;i -hort time, IIARVKST has become achieveil imiiicn-c |iu|>n!ai :t\ in Kugland. Probably j -omcthing of a family; n hniiif for quality avant- because of tune- I ike. "'Death of an Klecti ir Citizen" garde music of all kind-. IIARVKST enmrs from You'll hear a lot uf it. Kugland. Here in the U.S. we now haw a glimp-e of w hat'- really happening over there:

PINK FLOYDI Our $22.95 Lister, with Runners. MAgJMMA

v Shirley & Dolly Collins

Weran furnish this lister in both II and 16inch. "Anthems In Eden": N" l-l'.". 14 inch, with IH.IIIWIIC.1M; weight, IT". II.-. I'net. WSS.ttS Shirley and Holly Collin-have collected traditional weight. 1-"H--. _ material from times past, u.-iiig medieval instru- ... , _ ... »»entj|tiini TuyrUier. .tlu-y- JUuku jiiu_-n which .prut .vneei.or ooiii.a- ■ the I'mk Kloyd, one of Kng- Innd's top group- 'and also very popular in the I'nited State- . Pink Klovd creates a ' •'••■• licve- it- mu-ic -Inmlil he Useful and living. It 1-. All that and the title. UMMAGUMMA. We don't know what it means either, iperhap-, two for the price of one1. The King of Cang Plows. i>

i>V'THIRD EAR BAND v. ;A

vj "Alchemy": ' There isn't another group 111 the world that sounds ' like The Third Kar Hand. Tiny Use instruments Panama Limited Jug Band: like Egyptian tahla. , violin, viola, and cello. Nairn- of the (croup; name of the it Ilium. Thi- young •4.1.00 net eiisti i» 11tt order, no discount The sound i.- unforgettable, hypnotic and magic. irroup four guys and a (rirl have a h Wmlii not mako any discount on plows, bat »« make The Third Kar Hand has played to huge iiudiences funky ju(! Iiand-folk-iounti'y-.ia/i»-pop sound, and oa thopriro of *4.1 00 for thin win*plow delivered on in London, and the effect has alwavs been the same. fact ry fr mw combine it with traditional music. Titles- like. "Go- puUMtoteht. "' " " h'chpoint you mas, Thousands mesmerized . . . which isn't easy these ing to Germany!' "Wildcat Squall!' Listen for the No. I81SA,I8I5B. Our priceprice, witliwith 2 12-inch plows comcom- "W- bones, spoons, mandolin and jug . . . Knuli-h style. pleto -1:100 No. 18157. Oar Bpocisl prico with 2-ll-inch plow* complete -.moo Watch for one English Tim 11 hove illustration shnw« onr improved old rel. Harvest after another. •bloR.injr, which work" perfectly with 4 iinr>en nlireiist. or 2 llhonfl of 2. Has moel .% hwl», KpriliR liflM. 2 cutters. For now. a Happy Thanksgiving and a cheery 4 lior-e •Toner nnd Dockyoko. Hi im- ar» Teryotronu. UMMAGUMMA to you all. KMT- IIARVKST It is very eiiH) to liBtidle. v.-ry .-,-i-lly riirrl««l on thrco label. From Malcolm and the family. wheels, mill 1- nn,ir«nti ed tti Im liKhtor nil the te«m tlmn ■ny other walkinit plow in proportion to the work done, »nd lighter with driver th.in »ny other wheel plow miidr. Pious are made with double hoard ami chilled cant Introduced in the U.S. shares. We recommeri'l CH-t -hares for hard or sanity by Capitol. ion h 11-. « lull -o.- \ . 1 . ilo no! hesliali (o write u». We can nave jon money on slmONt anylliiiiK <>>at IM nuxle. (Efltttwrttnti lath} (Eamjma PERSPECTIVE SECTION II Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 J

VIEWS ON THE APOLLO PROGRAM

Next Steps In Space

By Dr. Thomas 0. Paino Administrator for NASA Mankind entered a new era at Tran- of perhaps a hundred scientists. we now commit ourselves as a nation. ? Just one development, have been of enor- quillty Base - an era In which trarel In the late 1970's we could establish mous benlflt. They provide more accurate will be reckoned not in thousands of on the moon a base camp that could be My own belief Is that we should press data for weather forecasts, aid mariners, miles but In millions and billions. Space occupied for months or even years. toward In a balanced program - scientif- and aircraft pilots In fixing their posit Is an endless frontier for our children ic and technological development as well Ions, and give map makers hithertl unob- and for all futuro generations. In the 1980's we could send men to as exploration. Of course our goals and tainable details of the earths surface. In I baiters that men will drive onward Mars - a,voyage that would test our the pace we strive to attain them, must the years ahead they will flndundlscwer- In the years ahead to Mars, to the moons knowledge and equipment for travel to redlect our national will, and there are ed mineral deposits and sources of fresh of Jupiter, and to other new worlds in Venus and others planets later on. well-informed and reasonable men who water; make global agricultural surveys oar solar system. Some of these destin- m addition to these manned ventures feel we should proceed more slowly. and detect diseased crops; and even help ations are attainable in this century, so- we will learn more about our solar sys- in the fight agalnsy pollution of air and me even within the next two decades. tem from unmanned probes. Several are It has been said that we should con- water. If we give full rein to our growing space already scheduled for the 1970's. These centrate all our resourses on our prob- And the conquest of space Is every capabilities, we can rapidly establish a Include flights to orbit Mars, and others lems here at home. But I believe that thing lifting men's horlzens and spirits. bridge head in the heavens In the next to land there, and the first multiple-plan- it would be a tragedy to foreclose our Not only have global sattllltes brought dozen years. et flight, for which the targets will be future In space. I believe that our Nat- nations closer, but • as CoL Frank Bor- In the mld-1970's, for example, we first Venus then Mercury. Ion can and must do these things simul- man*s warm reception in the Soviet union could begin to assemble in earth orbit All these are exciting prospects. taneously - not hist one at a time. showed - space achlevmenta are crossing a permanent manned station. Gradually But they raise the most fundamental of Space exploration already has made the barriers that divide men on earth. enlarged, it would become the worksite questions: To what goals in space should life better on earth. Satellites, to mention •Exerptad from the "Natlonol Geographic PERSPECTIVE SECTION II Monday, D.c. 15, 1969 The Importance of Communication As the strains of "Doop-de-doop-do" floated adjust to living with people on earth. We can. down from the moon, millions of earthllngs wat- not forget how often we fail to use our language ching and listening to astronauts Conrad and simply, clearly, and humanly to break commun Bean marvelled at what they were seeing and ication barriers between majority and minority hearing;. Yet probably few of those millions stop- groups, students and faculties, and governments ped to consider the kinds of communications and people. that they were reclevlng, the roles com -m il- Apollo 12 serves as an indication of what catlon plays in a project as energetic and success- man can achieve when he works toward a com- ful as the Apollo 12 mission, and the implica- mon , carefully defined goal. In this Instance : . tions for communication that an event such as communication between subordinates and super- Apollo 12 can have. visors, legislators and scientists, laymen and As the two astronauts wrestled with the mal- technicians, and a government and its people functioning camera, trudged through the moon did take place. Why did communication succeed dust, and gathered grapefruit-sized moo I rocks, in this endeavor when it falls in so many other their attentive chuckeled at the simple, excited, areas? Was It high worker morale, organized **4 and happy expressions of awe from the space and detailed work -plans, disciplined staffs, explorers. Here were men blissfully absorbed development of a precise language? Certainly In their work. Here were men in one of the most all of these factors contributed to the success dramatic moments in history com -lunlcatlng to of the Apollo 12 mission. But beyond these millions of people 240,000 miles away In a re- more tangible elements lies the intangible one markably colloquial and easily understandable of desire. v - language. Desire — on the part of an enthusiastic 'y^sSNSj u One could not help laughing at Conrad as public, a skilled scientific and technical com- w_ V - say he exclaimed, "Whoople. Mai, that may have munity, and a powerful government — helped « ^^ v. been a small step for Neil, but that's along make this feat possible. Desire to conquer r * •' j ■ one for me",and "Hey, guess what I see sitting space, put a man on the moon by 1070, and be •Si over there...." H ore was language, both in tone first in the space race gave the Impetus to the •» • and in meaning, wlih which everybody could Iden- Apollo project. Clearly, Apollo 12 reaffirms tify. This language created first an empathetlc, what man has known for a long time; given Communicating the "doop-de-doops" of the astronauts, tho emotional response and only later gave way to DESIRE - money, skill, efficiency, and cooper- Intellectual evaluation. The simplicity and casual- ation will be found to satisfy the desire. largo up-side-down umbrella object perched on a tripod, tho S- ness of the astronauts' con7ersationnserved not It Is less than unique to argue that If we can band antenna, hovors ovor a busy astronaut conducting scien- only to inform and amuse the listeners but, achieve such feats in space, we can solve en- tific experiments noxt to tho lunar modulo. most importantly, to involve them. vironmental pollution and poverty on earth. Yet Such lines as "The camera worked a little we still do not seem to have realized mat NOW when I hit it with a hammer" and "Okay Dokey, is when the same students, professors, house- outstanding, man!" made an awesome, almost wives, businessmen. Journalists, and politicians Flat Earth Liberals incomprehensible situation quite believable. The who have spent considerable time talking about "wows", "oh, man's", and the "doop-de-doops" America's achievements in space must spend Sometimes you can't help getting toe feeling that the were of therapeutic as well as conceptual val- even more time talking about ways to solve liberals won't be satisfied unless the American space program ue to the listeners because such expressions America's problems on earth. We know that ends In disaster. Witness James Wechsler's bubble-headed allowed Identification with the astronauts and an if the desire is there, the task can be completed. column which he coyly empathizes with the space monkey: awakening awareness of what it Idle to walk on Maybe one of the strongest messages communl "I suppose a general lack of Imagination about the general the moon. cated to us from Apollo 12 is that a nation space frenzy affects these remarks. Possibly I Identify with Because the crew of the "Intrepid" chose proud of Its achievements In space is still in Bonny because I would be terrified and baffled to find myself open, frank Informal conversation, they helped desparate need of extensive, meaningful commu- floating In space,' says Wechsler, who reminds us that amidst millions of listeners personalize the experience nication about its problems on earth. all this "space frenzy","kids are dying in Vietnam." of the two moon travelers and escape, even if Finally, each of us needs to consider the im- "Shocking and disgraceful' Is how Dr.Spock characterizes the only momentarily, from the problems and frus- plications of such generalizations as 'an achieve- moon shot. And listen to Drew Pearson poor-mouthing trations of life on earth. Enjoyment, personali- ment for mankind.' If we are sincere in saying Apollo 11 oil a characteristically churHsh comment: "At zation, and Involvement remain three powerfully that one nation's achievements in space benefit Cape Kennedy, the US Is about to launch the most carefully useful effects of the astronauts' communication all of mankind and that as we conquer space, rehearsed, most expensive, most unnecessary project of this with each other, Houston, and the world. earth becomes a smaller more cohesive unit, century by which man will reach a piece of drab, radioactive While the astronauts probably never intended we need to work harder for international commu- lava-like real-estate, hitherto romantic cause of dlslance- to use their conversation as persuasive mess- nication. the moon." ages designed to continue support for the space We need to contemplate now ways of creating Space shots very definitely reflect strong feelings of nation- program, involvement on the part of the listen- an 'earth language' that will enable men on this al pride and competitiveness and the Luna 15 attempt not ers should help to continue financial as well as planet to operate as a unified community prepared only mocks the whole pious Ideal of International cooperation, moral support for slmialr missions. Regard- to grapple with the surprises we are sure to but demonstrates that the US is beating the pants off the less of the persuasion that might have taken find as we continue exploration of space. Russians. And so we arrive at the heart of the Drewpean dil- place because of the simple, clear dialogue Because of Apollo 12 we have seen again emma. Long fond of thinking of themselves as the banner- between the moon explorers and earth listen- how meaningful frank expressions of feeling can bearers of human progress .the liberals find that they must ers, one of the most impressive aspects of be. We have realized again that if communica- only ignore realities of national competition for the sake of that dialogue was that it provided an lllustra tion can exist among so many individuals and abstract UN-type pieties, but must also carp peevishly about tion of the effectiveness of clear, ordinary, groups on such an ambitious project, surely the most Imaginative and progressive human adventure of all and uninhibited communication. communication can occur among other individuals time. A final step remains. Drewps Wechsler, Pearson, Spock In addition to enjoying the human qualities and groups who must accomplish even more and Co. will soon get honorary membership In the Flat Earth of the conversation from the moon, many ambitious tasks. Society. Meanwhile, writing as our astronauts achieve their listeners probably admired man's extensive For a second time, we have been shown the successful launch, we wish them a successful and glorious abilities to adapt to new experiences, to treat need for Increased unification on earth as man trip, a safe and happy return. the extraordinary as strictly ordinary I Yet leaves Its boundaries and explores bound-less as we laud ourselves for our ability to adjust space. Effective communication will remain Exerpted from the 'National Review', to unique experiences, we are unable to for- the key factor in our abilities as earthllngs to July 29, 1969. get how often we do not seem to be able to adapt to new discoveries in space and more •doop-de-doop-do's' from...

By M. ROSENWASSER Speech and Communications Dept.

In Their Own Words..

Conrad s first words hands get tired carrying these 'Man, that may have been tools, particularly the hand tools. a small one for Nell, but that's a long one for me.' COMMANDER CONRAD: You fThls was in reference to as- ever see those pictures of gir- tronaut Neil Armstrong's first affes running In slow motion? words on landing on the moon Exactly what I feel like. during the Apollo 11 mission on July 20, 1969: 'That's one small Probing for moon rocks: step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.' Conrad Is only 5 COMMANDER BEAN: feet 61/2 inches.) They're not at all like Neil's First impressions: (Nell Armstrong's) rocks...This COMMANDER BEAN: It looks rock is different, the way it Is like somebody took some cake shaped, the way it is partly roun- Icing and spread it with a big ded. Under that dirt maybe knife, laid it all around, and then there's something different... somebody shot some BB's into it. What we got looks like It's a R really is beautiful. burled rock not unlike others around here but appears to have Moving around on the surface: a coating on it - iridescent. COMMANDER CONRAD: Holy COMMAND2R CONRAD; I crater, It is beautiful out here!... see some different type rocks. We couldn't have picked a better Don't they look melted? They're spot. We could play geologist not completely Jagged - maybe all day and we would get no molten...1 have several small further than we are now. rocks sitting out in front of me In the moon's gravity that have a neat mound of dirt built up around them. COMMANDER BEAN: You really can move around out here, Unfurling the flag: Apollo 12 astronauts, left to right, Alan L. Bean, lunar module pilot; Richard F. Gordon, com- Houston. You can Just run and mand module pilot and Charles Conrad Jr., commander relax during flight to the moon. Gordon bounce Just like you can on that COMMANDER- CONRAD: I remained in the command module in lunar orbit, while Conrad and Bean descended in their lun- pogo stick. (Later) The legs hope everybody down there is as ar module to the moon's surface. don't get a bit tired, but your proud of it as we are to put it up. PERSPECTIVE SECTION II Mondoy, Dec. 15, 1969 Reflections On Whatever Happened To The Norman Mailer As Aquarius The Two Face. g^ g. ^ kind? Man On Apollo 11 Of Apollo By NORMAN MAILER "Intrepid Has Landed.'' Reprinted from LIFE magazine It was Aquarius, we may re- member, wh o was free to de- By G. CLAUDE ALBERT clare the voyage of Apollo 11 w is either the noblest expres- Co-News Editor sion o! the century or high mark of the fundamental insanity of the time. But who is to be the judge Apollo was the Greek Sun of the ship of flames? It wwe god. When Apollo astronaut Arm- Kierkegaard who declared that strong took man's first step on man could never know his most the moon, many hoped that it fundamental nature --a saint symbolized the dawning of a new could as easily be convinced he era for America - an era of was a monster or a saint of the human triumph. If man tried hard deep -- the devil we know by enough he could rival the sun. way of Milton is the archduke of Complex problems could be the angels. The point, propor- brought out Into the light and tions restored to Aquarius' mo- solved. A new warmth would per- dest dimension, is that he does meate humanity. The future held not know how diabolical or out the possibility of brotherhood generous his nature may be. and community. 'Tranqulllty Like an adolescent married Base" promised real signi- before he can vote, and trying to ficance. react to the congratulation "You're a married man," a re- But Apollo was not a poetic mark which has no reality to the venture. The Apollo proect was brand-new groom, so America born of nationalism and competi- and the world were in a round tion. Our optimism vanished with of congratulations -- we had the splashdown of Armstrong, Al- landed a man on the moon. The drln, and Collins. We realised event wis so removed, however, that Apollo had been merely a so unreal, tint no objective cor- frustrating distraction. We were relative existed to prove it had shown the marvellous things that not cconclvably been an event mankind could accomplish. But staged In a television studio — we were also shown his contin- the greatest con of the century ued affection for narrow motives. — and indeed a good mind, pro- Apollo was not a symbol of coming duct of the inlquites, treach- unity but a verification of human eries, gold, passion, Invention, conflict. ruse, deception and rich worldly stink of the Renaissance could The masslce attack on earth- hardly deny that the event If bogus bound plagues which we had hoped was as great a creation in mass for failed to materialize. In- hoodwinking, deception and leg- stead Apollo was used to argue erdemain as the true ascent was the basic health of American in technology, engineering and society. physics. Indeed, conceive of the genius of such a conspiracy: It would take men mightier, more Dr. Ralph Abernathy, head of trustworthy and more resource- the Southern Christian Leader- ful than anything In this century ship Conference, watching the in- or the ones before. Merely to spiring lift-off of the Apollo 11 conceive of such men was the moonship said, "For I a moment surest way to know the event was I almost forgot there were not staged. Yes, the century was millions of poor, starving Ameri- a giant and a cretin. Man had cans.* Even Abernathy momen- become a Herculean embodiment tarily fell prey to the distraction. of the Vision, but the bralnontop CPS- ' • of the head was as small as a transistorized fist, and the cham- But reality had returned to New fflex bers of theheart had shrunk to the face us. Ironically Apollo was Lobo dry hard seeds of some hybrid also the Greek god of sickness. future.

The AMA Had Better Check Lest This Put Medicare on Mars "A young man, a South Carolinian, came into my office not long ago and said 'I want to thank you, Mr. Congressman, for sending me to the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Sprints.' He said, 'I am proud of these silver wings—I can fly anything in the world.' He added, 'I have already been selected for the team to land on Mars in 1981. . . . and so I am studying medicine ... I am studying medicine in order to know the effects of space on the human body so that 1 can medically treat men on Mars.'" —Rep. Wm. Jennings Bryan Dorn of South Carolina: address on the space program to that State's General Assembly, p. ES9.17 Congressional Record July 15. •f'»" "I- F. Sione'$ W««kly" July 28, 1969 —

Question For A Lunar Morning After The day men first stepped on the moon may prove a bad day for mankind. We have spent $30 billions on space; the Russians, a comparably burdensome amount. These are only down-pa\ mentx. Now the competition to be first with a base on the moon, and then on Mars, begins and with it new fears and tensions. In the Senate debate on the ABM last week Symington quoted that premonitory remark by former Air Force Chief of Staff White, "Tomorrow those who control space will control the world." An arms race in space will put Hell in the heavens. While the earth decays, we will fill the skies with flying weaponry. That giant leap will soon land us in the Buck Rogers era; its puerile mentality and enormous cost will be a provocation to the desperate poor everywhere, while its gilded welfare rolls maintain a new crop of millionaires from Houston to San Diego. That tidal wave of TV banality on the moon landing turned an historic moment into a cosmic commercial, a planetary brainwash to keep their aero- space gravy train moving. It is atill not too late to ask ourselves. "What if we let the Russians be first on $48,835,000,000 and nine years after John Kennedy established it as America's goal, two as- Mars and we become the first on earth to wipe out poverty instead?" tronauts stalked a dusty moon and brought back these rocks. Ju -trom ™|.r\ Sion.'i W.«fcly"l V 28, 1969 A PERSPECTIVE SECTION II Monday, DM. 15, 1969 MAN'S EFFORTS ON EARTH

"When you are talking to people who are disruption - and I personally think we living in the ghetto and when there is are already in a revolution in this alienation within the students groups and country - the space program and its a black and white militancy heading to LET IT BLEED exploits are almost irrelevant..." San a to r M ark 0 . H atfl.ld perking apace on a feeder road off in a cadre 40-odd strong. At that reappeared at the border of the present state." "Get off the stage, by Grover L«wi* U. 8. 680 with the good-natured precise instant, nobody—Sam stage. The Angels made a get off the stage," a sizable portion ALTAMONT SPEEDWAY, crack, " to your Cutler included—could have had half-hearted gr«b at him, but this of the crowd began to howl. None Alameda County, California—All right. It'a outasite." Along the any way of knowing it, but the time some friendly longhairs led of the Angels budged, and the cry march route to the performance. "party" was already well on the him off in the direction of the soon faded away. acroM the scalded brown hills way to being over. looming above this seedy, area, dope of all shapes, sizes, and medical tent. After another tense delay, out-at-the-elbowa drag strip colon waa being openly dropped, After a characteristically Since I'd promised to call in a Cutler reappeared and surveyed located 60 miles northeast of San smoked, bartered, and sold. The lengthy delay, the Jefferson report on the day's doings to the audience for a long, grave Francisco in the monotonous, only police in sight were the Airplane followed Santana. Howard Smith at WABC-FM, I moment before saying simply, sepia-tone wastes of the Livermore far-too-few highway patrolmen, Nothing, but nothing, went right went searching for a phone. I "I'd like to introduce your friends, Valley, there hung in the already who were concentrating for them. To begin with, they found one—exactly one telephone ." polluted air the mingled odors of exclusively on directing the sounded maddeningly off-key. for perhaps a half million It was full dark now, scores of burning grass and patchouli oil, rnghtmarishly snarled traffic. Over Then, just as they were beginning people—in the firm grip of a local bonfires were flickering on the that heady, almost suffocating a squad car radio came the report to pick up a little altitude, a nude radio newsman who explained trash-strewn slopes, everybody body scent so favored among the that a nude man had leapt into the black man, obviously freaked out, that he couldn't relinquish it for a present was standing and craning now nameless nomads who used to line of traffic from an overpass on somehow managed to clamber up minute because, in addition to his and suddenly the Stones were be called the . the highway, and required on the apron of the stage. An own news chores, he was before us in a dazzling burst of In the course of the day—last ambulance assistance. "I'm Mick Angel braced him, and the black coordinating the helicopter flights noise and lights, Mick Jagger Saturday—four babies were born Jagger's brother—ball me," a man clumsily threw a punch that landing and evacuating the bumping and grinding in exquisite in the midst of the multitudes stoned kid bawled, groping at a didn't connect. Pour Angels performing rock groups. "Sorry nastiness and rasping out assembled here, and an passing girl's breasts. With a kicked and beat the man to his pal," he smiled wanly, and for a "Jumping Jack Flash." For the undetermined number of panicky look, she shoved him knees and, still flailing at him, lingering moment I almost felt first time, the day seemed to havs expectant mothers suffered away and hurried on. dragged him off stage. There was sorry for him. some significance. A frail young miscarriages. ID the crush of the ominous surging and shoving in In the medical tent, I talked to girl in wire-rimmed glasses That evening, four people from amphitheatre, my friends and I the tight-packed throng near the the physician in charge of the standing near me in the crowd sang the throng died violently, three of found a place to sit perhaps a platform. Grace Slick crooned volunteer first-aid operation, Dr. and danced in near-delirium: "Oh, them by violent accident. The quarter of a mile away from the over and over, "Please sit down, Richard Baldwin. A pleasant, Mick, 1 love you—you make me so fourth, a still-nameless black man, bandstand. I scanned the crowd people, please sit down." The round-faced man who looked excited. Everybody in the whole band continued to play a was kicked and stabbed to death in with zoom-lens binoculars. The close to exhaustion, he estimated world is watching us—even God." mechanical semblance of "The full or partial view of a crowd that sheer magnitude of the gathering that his staff had treated 300 After the song, an Angel various professional head-counters was awesome and, as the day Other Side of This life," with bad-trip patients by the middle of attempted to block Jagger's path put at between 300,000 and progiesaed, not a little disquieting. Grace lividly improvising: "Find the afternoon. "But the concert's to the edge of the stage. Jagger yourself someone to love, but 500,000 people—quite possibly In the main, the audience struck not over, you know," he added in stepped around him. "There's so don't fuck him around." At the many of you," he said admiringly the largest throng ever assembled me as benign, passive, and a soft, rueful tone. At the flap of unutterably stoned. But more song's conclusion—it just sort of the tent, a volunteer medic shook to the audience. "Stay cool now, for a rock musk event anywhere in than once, I had the troubling went away after a while—Jack his head in wonder: "There's and try not to move around too the nation, Including . feeling that if the mammoth Casady, trembling with emotion, enough bad dope changing hands much." The immense crowd had come crowd was itself capable of feeling snapped caustically, "Will the In this field to paint and paper the The prelude to the final trouble together, on less than a full day's Angels please note that when notice, for the long-promised and anything on a mass gut level, the whole Haight-Ashbury. Even came a third of the way through mass gut immediately devoured its somebody's freaking out, you bummer brownies. Who the hell "Sympathy for the Devil." often-canceled free Rolling Stones don't help him by kicking the shit concert, first planned for Golden own feeling, swallowed up its own ever heard of bummer brownies Apparently angered by hecklers in capacity for spontaneity by its out of him. I'd also like to before?" Gate Park, then scheduled at the first few rows, a half-dozen very enormity. It wasn't a good announce that Marty Balin was another equally remote racing On stage, Crosby, Stills, Nash, Angels swan-dived off the stage feeling to feel. punched unconscious in that little strip in Sonoma County on the and Young began their set into the audience and began Sam Cutler, the Stones' comic number you just ssw staged coast. On again, off again, it unannounced. By now the whipping heads. The music Cockney road manager, took the and I'd like to say—" seesawed for a time, and here platform was aswarm with more' stopped abruptly. In a pleading mike a few minutes before noon to At the rebuke, the Angels Angels than ever, despite Sam voice, Jagger, who was wearing a comes your 19th nervous plead access for a truck attempting charged bullishly into . It breakdown. Cutler's earlier warning that the long red robe, cried: "Everybody, was a sick, scary moment as fists As soon as the Altamont site to deliver music equipment: "If all bandstand might collapse under brothers and sisters, cool out, the cowboys will get off the Hertz flew and bodies blurred in a was selected on Friday, the hordes their weight. At times, the listen to me, please cool confused tangle. When the began to arrive by the tens of van, please ..." A cluster of kids swaggering bikers and their old out ... Is anybody hurt? thousands, virtually in tandem dung to the sides of the truck in pandemonium ended, only Grace ladies obscured the performers Who's fighting, and what for? from view. Inching my way back with the fleet of rented trucks order to get into the already ■**• left untouched. Sam Cutler We've got to stop this trouble right perilously packed area near the grabbed an open mike-, and to where I'd been sitting in the now." After a few confused ferrying in electronic equipment stage; only a scattering of the easy for the sound system and raw requested that all "unauthorized crowd, I took a quick personal moments, the music resumed. riders dropped off as requested. inventory of myself; I was lumber for the stage. Early arrivals .j e op le"-me Sirring the At that point, my friends and I Cutler shrugged and said, "All Angela—leave the stage wind-chapped and sunburned and gladly left the amphitheatre so I staked out choice vantage points right, then, let's all have a party." in the parched grass near where the immediately. The Angeja aWfian tly shaken by the fracas onstage and could make my phone call in The speed-oriented rock band stood their ground. Somehow the stage was being frantically erected more than a little pissed off that Tracey, whicii i did, which in turn Santana opened the program. Airplane managed to get through in the natural amphitheatre I'd have to drive all the way to threw us back into the heart of the During the group's second "Volunteers of Amefiea"-dedi- Tracey, a ranching town 16 miles post-concert bumper-to-bumper adjacent to the race track stands. number, which sounded The overnight campers found (1) cated "to all those "people who away, just to make a simple phone turtle derby headed toward deprestingly like its first, someone wouldn't let us play in Golden no public water supply, (2) no call. Livermore and the city two hours hurled an empty wine bottle at the Gate Park"—before abandoning The concert's organizers had later. It took us three hours to stable food concession, and (S) .stage. Slivers of glass rained across the stage. scanty sanitation facilities. On promised to conclude the program travel 25 miles. On the radio, we the platform. The band's guitarist In the audience, a rusty-haired Saturday, I saw men and boys by before- dark, but the sun went heard that the freaked-out black broke off playing and savagely kid from Fresno shrugged down about 4.30 and there was no the score urinating against a fence cursed the heckler. An fatalistically: "The Angels are just sign of the Stones. The crowd man the Angels had stomped had near the long queues leading to the unidentified stage functionary red freaks, that's all. Those dudes began to thin out, but not in large made his thiijf djiand t fiaal line of portable Johns. took the mike to request that the used to be heavy, man, but numbers. The Angels stood in a appearance at the* concert stage With some friends, I arrived at Hell's Angels come onstage to nowadays they're stone geeks. solid phalanx across the front of The poor bastard had gone off the mingle, mangle, and jam of the serve aa a security force. The That's what redsll do to you." the stage, arms akimbo, glowering somewhere and" sjjotitea himself it amphitheatre well before noon. Angels didn't hesitate; strutting While the Flying Burrito at the audience. Cutler piece, and then he'd gone back and We'd had to walk four miles after a and preening in their colors, Brothers rousingly jammed the announced, "The Stones gotten himself kicked, and cut to grinning California highway lugging cases of beer with them, kicks out of "Six Days on the death for his trouble. patrolman directed us into a positively won't come out to they swarmed onto the platform Road," the nude black man perform while the stage is in its When we reached the Alameda county line, about a mile north of the amphitheatre, I spotted s How Hunger Stunts The Children Of The Poor In Infancy — And Its Social Cost teenage girl wrapped in a poncho "Malnutrition and undernourishment among poor Amer- measures must be undertaken to assure that every pregnant sitting alone on the shoulder of the ican children can and does result in — apathy, listlessness, woman, every infant, every preschool child, and every highway. Something about her and loss of energy and ability to concentrate, slowness of school child who risks suffering from hunger or malnutri- posture made me get out of the comprehension, inattention, restlessness, behavioral prob- tion receives an adequate, nutritious diet. barely moving car to see if she lems, and retarded learning ... In fact undernutrition may "The economic and social costs to our society — the loss needed a ride. She didn't raise her be the primary cause of diminished intellectual achievement of productivity and work capacity, the casts of disease and among poor American children. At least one study in this mortality ... in short, the costs of blighted lives are also head at the question. "Mister, I country, in which other economic and social factors were the inevitable results of hunger and malnutrition. . . . These don't need a ride," she said in a controlled, has established a direct correlation between costs can be calculated in economic terms . . . The Bureau thick, stoned slur, "I need to go to undernutrition in infancy and stunted physical and mental of the Budget has already estimated, preliminarily, that a hospital." Involuntarily, her development in preschool years.* for every dollar we save by failing to eliminate hunger hand twitched out from under the 'That severe malnutrition of the kind found in develop- and malnutrition it costs our nation $3.30." poncho. Apparently she'd lit a ing countries results in permanent brain damage to children —From the Senate's (McGovern) Committee report cm cigarette some time back, and then who are retarded for life has been scientifically substanti- The Food Gap: Hunger and Malnutrition in the US. forgotten about it. Her fingers ated. More study is needed to determine the exact relation- •"They were shorter, weighed less and had small heads. were on fire. ship between malnutrition and irreversible brain damage in . . . Their IQs were lower than the control children and it this country, but . . . the clear evidence that malnutrition was found that their neurological and intellectual develop- is one major factor in Warded intellectual development is ment also correlated with the duration of their undernutri- Reprinted (rom certainly enough to make action imperative. Immediate tion in infancy"—From footnote p. 15 of the report. -(rom "I.F. Stona'i W»»hly" S«pt.9, 1969 The Village Voice New Group DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 Wants People Rock Concerts And The Sounds Of Revolution To Be Friendly By RICHARD B. KAMINS Campus Music Critic "You've got the power to turn on the light!' Yoj're going to fight Fascism? you are using their methods — i.e. A meeting of a group tenta- POWER - SDS Weathermen, Hill's Angels? So, just what has been changed? tively called People will be held A greal majority of the people at theStones' free concert are against "But, If you try sometime, you jist might find, tonight In Commons 313 at 7:30 the Vietnam Wvr. you get what you need." - Rolling Stones to "get people interested In learn- POWER - H ELL'S ANGELS - Educate- But educate correctly. The racism lhat the ignorant ing about each other' according Maybe most of the cr jwd vas too stoned to notice, but 'hero w*s — to a spokesman for the group. possess was handed down to them by the so-called educated people. is — a conflict going on. Educate! Destruction (physical destruction) may bring about a Dan Clifford, o.ie of the or- POW.'iR - - change, but will you live to see it? Mr.rtyrdom is not nv.ch more than ganizers of People, said students There is a mystique surrounding Rock M^-slc. The power and the often sit next to each other in a name and a grave. drive that It has has made It the spearhead of the Revolution tn the Educate! It seems as if WE'RE "up against the will ..." classes for a whole semester, Arts within the political Revolution. When the Beatles and the Stones or pass each other on sidewalks first came into our lives, everyone, especially oar parents were without even acknowledging the shocked. Their music freed us, gave us the power to speak. other's presence, and thatpeople seem to go out of the way to ig- ■Something's happeain' here - Wait it is ain't Draft Lottery Proves Meaningless nore others. exactly clear." - Steve Stills After a letter to the Connecti- POWER - ABUSE - PERMBSTVSNES.3 cut Daily Campus last month ask- The Stones'free concert was a present from the artists to their aud- Unlimited Draft Call Likely ing people to replace remoteness ience. But their audience spawned the problem - • whoever tossed the with friendliness and openness, bottle at Santana started the problem, opened the door for the coin that the Angels pulled. The artists w-re faced with choosing one of two DETROIT, Mich. --Thehead Clifford said herecievedl2phone of the Selective Service for the those with a determent and a high calls. answers, neither of which appealed .0 anybody. They could have either lottery number out of dropping cancelled the show the minute the Angels stepped on the stage, thereDy state of M.chlgan has announced The group then circulated that all males classified 1-A dar- their deferment this coming year. mimeographed sheets to dormi- eliminating the violence, or continue the concert with the Angels on The scare techniq je could be used 1 stage. They chose the latter, and the Angels proceded to seize the ing 1970 can expect to be drafted tories and in classroom.; and re- no matter what lottery number to enlarge the grauo available for ceived 40 more calls from stu- power. they received during this in.uth's military duty in future years and If you're not part of the Solution . . . to prevent students with high lot- dents who felt the same way. drawing. Julie Sullo, another founder Some writers have said that the fate of the world rests with our The director, according to the tery num'.iers from escaping the of People, said the group had no generation. That moans Political Power, whether our generation w?.nts draft this year, and therefore it or not. Political Power-Establishment. H ow is It going to be a bet- student newspaper at the Univer- goal. "We just want to get the sity of Detroit, has warned stu- permanently. people together. Anything else is ter world? dents not to give up draft defer- There were no changes In the secondary,* she said. "Come Together" - I Chung ments if they have a high lottery quota system for local draft num' CMP, for Michigan's draft boards with the change to the There mvst be unification -• the bad must be purged: WaTt ig- calls aro expected to require lottery. Some memi.ers of Con- UConn norance, hate--maybe even the Angels. But, what seemed such a great calling everyone, number 1-366. gress are sug^estlnj that local possibility at Woodstock this past August, has nowlKRUi eaten away by The statement, in effect, says boards be abolished and that one Closed Circuit an audience thai was so "benign, passive, and unutterable stoned." H as the lottery was meaningless for nation*, draft board take its a kind of apaihy settled so soon? Michigan. The question remains place. No action will com? on There must be a change. What are you going to fight Racism, whether the director's state- such suggestions until the 1970 T.V. Schedule Fascism, and Nixon with? They've got the Kian and the Mlnutemnn. ment was meant simply to scare sessions begin. 9:30 a.m. - Film: Wiu^a To The World 10:00 a m, - The Campus To- day (Live) 10:30 a.m. - The World of B.C, 11 a.m. - On The Agenda; Sex Education - profs. Nuttal, Lang, Mosher, Goodkind 11:30 a.m. - The Underground Wax Museum 12 noon -The Campus Today 12:30 p.m. - Film: Wings To The World 1 p.m. - The Children's Hoar (Live) 1:30 p.m. - Senate Issues 2 p.m. —The News?...Indeed: 2:30 p.m. - Hizell Kelley interviews Provost Gant 3 p.m. - The Thirties: Ani- mated Cartoons - Prof. Fawcett 4 p.m. - Urlsen 4:30 p.m. - Class: EE349 6 p.m. - Class: ME 342 Programs subject to change without notice.

The Student Senate Aca- demics Committee reminds students that copies of old exams are on file in the Reserve Book room o* the Library.

fTOURS FRII PARKING 439-6063 NOW THRU TUESDAY 2:00 6:30 '9:00 The generation gap is more than just long hair, loud music, or a misunderstanding of ideals between father and son. Itis a void from which a new force must emerge a new hero!...

Applemanship...for Teachers is something more than cornering the apple market. It is cornering the best position in the teacher market, too. As a teacher in New York City you do just that. Teaching in New York offers a constant challenge and the chance to utilize talents and abilities fully. In addition, there is an unsurpassed benefits program: HfllL.HEROr ■ A salary schedule that ranks with the highest among the world's great cities; advanced salary Michael Douglas • placement for experienced teachers ■ orientation workshops and special programs for new- feresa Wright comers ■ tenure and security ■ choice of health plans ■ welfare fund ■ social security cover- and Arthur Kennedy age ■ pension plan allowing for increased take home pay ■ promotional opportunities ■ and much more—How do you like these apples? IN COLOR tor more Information jliout leeching in New York City, please write, telephone or visit the STARTS WED. FOR WEEK Office of Personnel, Bureau of Educational Staff Recruitment, Dept. (5) THE SHOES OF New York City Board of Education THE FISHERMAN 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201 Telephone: (212) 596-8060 P»n»vision*and Matrocolor PERSPECTIVE SECTION II Mmday, D.c. 15, 1969 MAN'S EFFORTS ON EARTH "When you are talking to people who are disruption - and I personally think we living in the ghetto and when there is are already in a revolution in this alienation within the students groups and country - the space program and its a black and white militancy heading to LET IT BLEED exploits ore almost irrelevant..." Senator M ark 0 . H at (laid parking apace on a feeder road off in a cadre 40-odd strong. At that reappeared- at the border of the present state." "Get off the stage, by Grover Lewis U. 8. 680 with the good-natured precise instant, nobody—Sam stage. The Angela made a get off the stage," a sizable portion ALTAMONT SPEEDWAY, crack, "Rock festival to your Cutler included—could have had half-hearted grtb at him, but this of the crowd began to howl. None Alameda County, California—All right. It's outaaite." Along the any way of knowing it, but the time some friendly longhair* led of the Angels budged, and the cry "party" was already well on the acroM the scalded brown hills march route to the performance him off in the direction of the soon faded away. — area, dope of all shapes, sizes, and way to being over. looming above this seedy, medical tent. After another tense delay, out-at-the-elbows drag atrip colors was being openly dropped, After a characteristically Since I'd promised to call in a Cutler reappeared and surveyed located 50 mile* northeast of San smoked, bartered, and sold. The lengthy delay, the Jefferson report on the day's doings to the audience for a long, grave Francisco in the monotonous, only police in sight were the Airplane followed Santana. Howard Smith at WABC-FM, I moment before saying simply, sepia-tone wastes of the Li verm ore far-too-few highway patrolmen, Nothing, but nothing, went right went searching for a phone. I "I'd like to introduce your friends, Valley, there hung In the already who ware concentrating for them. To begin with, they found one—exactly one telephone the Rolling Stones." polluted ah* the mingled odors of exclusively on directing the sounded maddeningly off-key. for perhaps a half million It was full dark now, scores of burning grass and patchouli oil, raghtmarishly snarled traffic. Over Then, just as they were beginning people—in the firm grip of a local bonfires were flickering on the that heady, almost suffocating a squad car radio came the report to pick up a little altitude, a nude radio newsman who explained trash-strewn slopea, everybody body scant so favored among the that a nude man had leapt into the black man, obviously freaked out, that he couldn't relinquish it for a present was standing and craning now nameless nomads who used to line of traffic from an overpass on somehow managed to clamber up minute because, in addition to his and suddenly the Stones were be called the hippies. the highway, and required on the apron of the stage. An own news chores, he was before us in a dazzling burst of In the course of the day-Hast ambulance assistance. "I'm Mick Angel braced him, and the black coordinating the helicopter flights noise and lights, Mick Jagger Saturday—four babies ware born Jagger's brother—ball me," a man clumsily threw s punch that landing and evacuating the bumping and grinding in exquisite in the midst of the multitudes stoned kid bawled, groping at a didn't connect. Pour Angels performing rock groups. "Sorry nastiness and rasping out aasemblad here, and an passing girl's breasts. With a kicked and beat the man to his pal," he smiled wanly, and for a "Jumping Jack Flash." For the undetermined number of panicky look, aha shoved him knees and, still flailing at htm, lingering moment I almost felt first time, the day seemed to hav-. expectant mothers suffered away and hurried on. dragged him off stage. There was sorry for him. some significance. A frail young miscarriages. In the cruah of the ominous surging arid shoving in In the medical tent, I talked to girl in wire-rimmed glasses That evening, four people from amphitheatre, my friends and I the tight-packed throng near the the physician in charge of the standing near me in the crowd sang the throng died violently, three of found a place to sit perhaps a platform. Grace Slick crooned volunteer first-aid operation. Dr. and danced in near-delirium: "Oh, them by violent accident. The quarter of a mile away from the over and over, "Please sit down, Richard Baldwin. A pleasant, Mick, 1 love you—you make me so fourth, a still-nameless black man, bandstand. I scanned the crowd people, please sit down." The round-faced man who looked excited. Everybody in the whole band continued to play a was kicked and stabbed to death in with zoom-lens binoculars. The close to exhaustion, he estimated world is watching us—even God." mechanical semblance of "The full or partial view of a crowd that sheer magnitude of the gathering that his staff had treated 300 After the song, an Angel various professional head-counters was awesome and, aa the day Other Side of This life," with bad-trip patients by the middle of attempted to block Jagger's path Grace lividly improvising: "Find put at between 300,000 and progressed, not a little disquieting. the afternoon. "But the concert's to the edge of the stage. Jagger 600,000 people—quite possibly In the main, the audience struck yourself someone to love, but not over, you know," he added in stepped around him. "There's so don't fuck him around." At the many of you," he said admiringly the largest throng ever assembled me as benign, passive, and a soft, rueful tone. At the flap of unutterably stoned. But more song's conclusion—it just sort of the tent, a volunteer medic shook to the audience. "Stay cool now, for a rock music event anywhere in than once, I had the troubling went away after a while—Jack his head in wonder: "There's and try not to move around too the nation, including Woodstock. feeling that if the mammoth Casady, trembling with emotion, enough bad dope changing hands much." The immense crowd had come crowd was itself capable of feeling snapped caustically, "Will the In this field to paint and paper the The prelude to the final trouble together, on leas than a full day's Angels please note that when notice, for the long-promised and anything on a mass gut level, the whole- Haight-Ashbury. Even came a third of the way through mass gut immediately devoured its somebody's freaking out, you bummer brownies. Who the hell "Sympathy for the Devil." often-canceled free Rolling Stones don't help him by kicking the shit concert, first planned for Golden own feeling, swallowed up its own ever heard of bummer brownies Apparently angered by hecklers in capacity for spontaneity by its out of him. I'd also like to before?" the first few rows, a half-dozen Gate Park, then scheduled at announce that Marty Balm was another equally remote racing very enormity. It wasn't a good On stage, Crosby, Stills, Nash, Angels swan-dived off the stage feeling to feel. punched unconscious in that little atrip in Sonoma County on the and Young began their sat into the audience and began Sam Cutler, the Stones' comic number you just saw staged coast. On again, off again, it unannounced. By now the whipping heads. The music Cockney road manager, took the and I'd like to say—" seesawed for a time, and here platform was aswarm with more' stopped abruptly. In a pleading mike a few minute* before noon to At the rebuke, the Angels Angels than ever, despite Sam voice, Jagger, who was wearing a comes your 19th nervous plead access for a truck attempting charged bulliahly into the band. It breakdown. Cutler's earlier warning that the long red robe, cried: "Everybody, was a sick, scary moment as fists Aa soon as the Altamont site to deliver music equipment: "If all bandstand might collapse under brothers and sisters, cool out, the cowboys will get off the Hertz flew and bodies blurred in a their weight. At times, the listen to me, please cool was selected on Friday, the hordes confused tangle. When the began to arrive by the tens of van, please ..." A cluster of kids swaggering bikers and their old out ... Is anybody hurt? thousands, virtually In tandem dung to the sides of the truck in pandemonium ended, only Grace , ladies obscured the performers Who's fighting, and what for? order to get into the already from view. Inching my way back with the fleet of ranted trucks •ras left untouched. Sam Cutler We've got to stop this trouble right perilously packed area near the grabbed an open mike lad ferrying in electronic equipment to where I'd been sitting in the now." After a few confused stage; only a scattering of the easy requested that all "unauthorized crowd, I took a quick personal moments, the music resumed. for the sound system and raw riders dropped off as requested. lumber for the stage. Early arrivals people" — m ear-ring the inventory of myself; I was At thai point, my friends and I Cutler shrugged and said, "All Angela—leave the atage wind-chapped and sunburned and staked out choice vantage points gladly left the amphitheatre so I right, then, let's ail have a party." immediately. The Angela defiantly in the parched grass near where the shaken by the fracas onstage and could make my phone call in The speed-oriented rock band stood their ground. Somehow the stage was being frantically erected more than a little pissed off that Tracey, which 1 did, which in turn San Una opened the program. Airplane managed to get through in the natural amphitheatre I'd have to drive all the way to threw us back into the heart of the During the group's second "Volunteers of America "-dedi- adjacent to the race track stands. Tracey, a ranching town 16 miles post-concert bumper-to-bumper ■ umber, which sounded cated "to all those people who away, just to make a simple phone turtle derby headed toward The overnight campers found (1) depreasingly like its first, someone wouldn't let us play in Golden no public water supply, (2) no call. Livermorc and the city two hours hurled an empty wine bottle at the Gate Park"—before abandoning stable food concession, and (S) The concert's organizers had later, R took us three hours to Mage. Slivers of glass rained across the atage. promised to conclude the program scanty sanitation facilities. On travel 25 miles. On the radio, we ii the platform. The band's guitarist In the audience, a rusty-haired Saturday, I saw men and boys by before, dark, but the sun went heard that the freaked-out black broke off playing and savagely kid from Fresno shrugged down about 4.30 and there was no the score urinating against a fence cursed the heckler. An fatalistically: "The Angels are just sign of the Stones. The crowd man the Angels had stomped Lad near the long queues leading to the unidentified stage functionary red freaks, that's all. Those dudes began to thin out, but not in large made his thhafjand t final line of portable Johns. took the mike to request that the used to be heavy, man, but numbers. The Angels stood in a appearance at th? concert stage'. With some friends, I arrived at Hell's Angels come onstage to nowadays they're stone geeks. solid phalanx across the front of The poor bastard hajd- gone off the mingle, mangle, and jam of the serve aa a security force. The That's what redsll do to you." the stage, arms akimbo, glowering somewhere and* gotten himself a amphitheatre well before noon. Angels didn't hesitate; strutting While the Flying Burrito at the audience. Cutler piece, and then he'd gone back and We 'd had to walk four miles after a and preening in their colors, Brothers rousingly jammed the announced, "The Stones gotten himself kicked, and cut to grinning California highway lugging cases of beer with them, kicks out of "Six Days on the positively won't come out to death for his trouble. patrolman directed us into a they swarmed onto the platform Road," the nude black man perform while the stage is in its When we reached the Alameda county line, about a mile north of the amphitheatre, I spotted a How Hunger Stunts The Children Of The Poor In Infancy — And Its Social Cost teenage girl wrapped in a poncho "Malnutrition and undernourishment among poor Amer- measures must be undertaken to assure that every pregnant sitting alone on the shoulder of the ican children can and does result in — apathy, listlessneas, woman, every infant, every preschool child, and every highway. Something about her and loss of energy and ability to concentrate, slowness of school child who risks suffering from hunger or malnutri- posture made me get out of the comprehension, insttention, restlessness, behavioral prob- tion receives an adequate, nutritious diet. barely moving car to see if she lems, and retarded learning ... In fact undernutrition may "The economic and social costs to our society — the loss be the primary cause of diminished intellectual achievement of productivity and work capacity, the casts of disease and needed a ride. She didn't raise her among poor American children. At least one study in this mortality ... in short, the costs of blighted lives are also head at the question. "Mister, I country, in which other economic and social factors were the inevitable results of hunger and malnutrition. . . . These don't need a ride," she said in a controlled, has established a direct correlation between costs can be calculated in economic terms . . . The Bureau thick, stoned slur, "I need to go to undernutrition in infancy and stunted physical and mental of the Budget has already estimated, preliminarily, that a hospital." Involuntarily, her development in preschool years.* for every dollar we save by failing to eliminate hunger hand twitched out from under the "That severe malnutrition of the kind found in develop- and malnutrition it costs our nation $3.30." poncho. Apparently she'd lit a ing countries results in permanent brain damage to children —From the Senate's (McGovern) Committee report on cigarette some time back, and then who are retarded for life has been scientifically substanti- The Food Gap: Hunger and Malnutrition in the US. forgotten about it. Her fingers ated. More study is needed to determine the exact relation- •"They were shorter, weighed less and had small heads. ship between malnutrition and irreversible brain damage in . . . Their IQs were lower than the control children and it were on fire. this country, but ... the clear evidence that malnutrition was found that their neurological and intellectual develop- is one major factor in retarded intellectual development is ment also correlated with the duration of their undernutri- Reprinted from certainly enough to make action imperative. Immediate tion in infancy"—From footnote p. 15 of the report. -from "I.F. Stona'. Waalcly" S.pt.9, 1969 The Village Voice New Group DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15. 1969 Wants People Rock Concerts And The Sounds Of Revolution To Be Friendly By RICHARD B. KAMINS Campus Music Critic •You've got the power to turn on the light!* Yoa're going to fight Fascism? rou are using their methods « i.e. A meeting of a group tenta- POWER - SDS Weathermon, Hill's Angels? So, just what has been changed? tively called People will be held A great majority of the people at the Stones' free concert are against "But, If you try sometlm?, you jast might find, tonight In Com TIins 313 at 7:30 the Vietnam Wvr. you get what you need .* - Rolling Stones to 'get people interested in learn- POWER - H ELL'S ANGELS - ing about each other* according Educate'- But educate correctly. The racism that the Ignorant Maybe most of the cnwd vas too stoned to notice, but ".here w?.s — possess was handed down to '.hem by the so-called educated people. to a spokesman for the group. Is — a conflict going on. Dan Clifford, o.ie of the or- Educate! Destruction (physical destruction) may bring about a POWSR - ROCK MUSIC - change, but will you live to see it? Mr.rtyrdom is not much more than ganizers of People, said students There Is a mystique surroundinc Rock Music. The power and the often sit next to each other in a name and a grave. drive that it has has made it the spearhead of the Revoluti n In the Educate! It seems as If WE'RE "up against the wa!l ... " classes for a whole semester, Arts within the political Revolution. When the Beatles and the Stones or pass each other on sidewalks first came Into our lives, everyone, especially our parents were without even acknowledging the shocked. Their music freed us, gave us the power to speak. other's presence, and thatpeople seem to go out of the way to Ig- ■Something's happonln' here - V/mt it Is ain't Draft Lottery Proves Meaningless nore others. exactly clear.* - Steve Stills After a letter to the Connecti- POWER - ABUSE - PERMBSIVSNESS cut Dally Campus last month ask- The Stones'free concert was a present from the artists to theiraud- Unlimited Draft Call Likely ing people to replace remoteness lence. But their audience spawned the problem - • whoever tossed the with friendliness and openness, bottle at Santana started the pr jblem, opened the door for the coin thai the Angels pulled. The artists were faced with choosing one of twu DETROIT, Mich. --Thehead Clifford said hereclevedl2phone of the Selective Service for the those with a defermeit and a high calls. answers, neither of which appealed ;o anybody. They could have either lottery numtier out of dropping cancelled the show the minute the Angels stepped on the stage, thereoy state of M.chlgan has announced The group then circulated that all males classified 1-A dar- their deferment this coming year. mimeographed sheets to dormi- eliminating the violence, or continue the concert with the Angels on The scare technique could be used stage. They chose the latter, and the Angels proceded to seize the ing 1970 can expect to be drafted tories and in classrooms and re- no matter what lottery number to enlargQ the group available for ceived 40 more calls from stu- power. they received during this muth's military duty In future years and dents who felt the same way. "If you're not part of the Solution ..." to prevent students with high lot- Julie Sullo, another founder Some writers have said that the fate of the world rests with our drawing. tery num'.«rs from escaping the generation. T.iat means Political Power, whether our generation w^nts The director, according to the of People, said the group had no student newspaper at the Univer- draft this year, and therefore goal. "We just want to get the It or not. Political Power-Establishment. H ow is It going to be a bet- permanently. people together. Anything else Is ter world? sity of Detroit, has warned stu- secondary,* she said. dents not to give up draft defer- There were no changes in the "Come Together" - I Ching ments if they have a high lottery quota system for local draft num'.er, for Michigan's draft boards with the change to the There mvst be unification - - the bad must be purged: W'*r, Ig- calls arc expected to require lottery. Som? memi.ers of Con- UConn norance, hate-- maybe even the Angels. But, what seemed such a great calling everyone, numlier 1-366. gress are suggestlnj that local possibility at Woodstock this past August, has now ba«u eaten away by The statement, In effect, says boards to abolished and that one Closed Circuit an audience thai was so "benign, passive,andunutterable stoned." H as the lottery was meaningless for naclo.na! draft board take its a kind of apathy settled so soon? Michigan. The question remains place. No action will com? on There must be a change. What are you going to fight Racism, whether the director's state- such suggestions until the 1970 T.V. Schedule Fascism, and Nixon with? They've got the Klan and the Mlnutemon. ment was meant simply to scare sessions begin. 9:30 a.m. - Film: wu.8s To The World 10:00 ft. m. - The Campus To- day (Live) 10:30 a.m. - The World of B.C. 11 a.m. - On The Agenda; Sex Education - profs. Nuttal, Lang, Masher, Goodklnd 11:30 a.m. - The Underground Wax Museum 12 noon - The Campus Today 12:30 p.m. - Film: Wings To The World 1 p.m. - The Children's Hour (Live) 1:30 p.m. - Senate Issues 2 p.m. -The News?...Indeed: 2:30 p.m. - Hazell Kelley interviews Pro/ost Gant 3 p.m. - The Thirties: Ani- mated Cartoons - Prof. Fawcett 4 p.m. - Urlsen 4:30 p.m. - Class: EE349 6 p.m. - Class: MK 342 Programs subject to change without notice.

The Student Senate Aca- demics Committee reminds studnnts that eoples of old exams are on file in the Reserve Book room o' the Library.

COLLEGE Fill PARKING '11 1011 NOW THRU TUESDAY 2:00 6:30'9:00 The generation gap is more than just long hair, loud music, or a misunderstanding of ideals between father and son. It-is a void from which a new force must emerge a new hero!..

Applemanship...for Teachers is something more than cornering the apple market. It is cornering the best position in the teacher market, too. As a teacher in New York City you do just that. Teaching in New York offers a constant challenge and the chance to utilize talents and abilities fully. In addition, there is an unsurpassed benefits program: HfllL.HEROr ■ A salary schedule that ranks with ihe highest among the world's great cities; advanced salary Michael Douglas • placement for experienced teachers ■ orientation workshops and special programs for new- feresa Wright comers ■ tenure and security ■ choice of health plans ■ welfare fund • social security cover- and Arthur Kennedy age ■ pension plan allowing for increased take home pay ■ promotional opportunities ■ and much more-How do you like these apples? IN COLOR

for more information ahoul leaching In New York City, please write, telephone or visit Ihe STARTS WED. FOR WEEK Office of Personnel, Bureau of Educational Staff Recruitment, Dept. (5) THE SHOES OF New York City Board of Education THE FISHERMAN 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201 Telephone: (212) 596-8060 Panavision'and Mctrocolor E

- DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 Burbach And Woolsey Vault Freshman To 92-86 Overtime Win vs. B.C.; 5th Win

By ALAN BARTH

Lee Barbach's game-tying 15 game with stmg rebounding on two more foil! shots for a foot jump shot with DM seeo.id and numerous tap-ins, sending 90-84 bulge, but the feat was left In regulation and Bill Wool- B.C. nto a 59-39 tie at the 12:20 duplicated by Prince of B.C. sey's six overtime points led mark. Boston established anor- Jim Berardinelli sunk a cor- the unbeaten H jsky freshmon to row lead un'll Begen and Parsons ner jump shot to give UConn its a come-from i.ehlnd 92-86 win locked things up at 68 all with 92-86 win. over Bosion College. 9:21 to go. Again the nip and The play of the two halves tuck continued as BC led pO-70 of regular time WU nip and tuck at the one m'n'ite mark."A all the wny with each team hol- UConn foul gave Don MidAloon We're ding slight margins throughout. a 1 and 1 situation of which ne The Huskies surged o a 15-9 sunk only the firsl to hand the lead in the first half but BC Eagles a slim Pl-79 lead with Unbeatable roared back on the baskets of Tom 18 seconds left. UConn work- Anstett and Don MscAloontolead ad the ball around for the best 21-15. However, UConn was still shot at the ouzzer and with the Too! in the ballgame and closed .ho Cloak reading :02, Lee Barbach gap to 28-24 on hoops by Rich pumped a perfect jumper to send Hennessey, Lee Barbach (2) and the game into overtime. The Frosh team, (ecs.tstic a foul shot by Rich Begen. With Lee Barbach took charge with 2:56 to go in the half, the Hus- a basket at 4:56 to ,-nnke the at the moment ot victory; had kies opened a 41-3; margin with score read 83-81 , UConn. Pat Barbach and Bob Parsons pav- DeVrles blocked on Eagle shot had just pulled one out of the ing the way and by the half, which UConn took downcourt for UConn led 47-38. The torrid an eventual basket . Bill Wool- fire for their 5th straight win. zone defense seem?1 to be the sey produced he next Husky hoop difference in the first half as with 2:00 to go and .in 86-81 They tied it up at the last sec- Boston was forced into many advantage for the Pupa followed turnovers which ended jp in U- by Woolsey's two free throws ond and won with over time. Conn points. and an 88-82 lead. Boston Co- The second half again saw both llege's Bob Smith then came ap teams trading the lead and play with two ;ree throws and with Track Teams Smash Four carried on tightly. Tom Anstett :52 left, UConn's lead w*s cut and Dave Frietag led the Eagles to 83-84. With only a half- Welch Stars in a surge to get back Into the minute to go, Woolsey connected In Swim Loss Marks; Beat Yale, Fordham

UCONN Yale's freshmen swim team, sporting a gaudy total of 10 All- UConn's record smashing Varsity and freshmen track teams ini- Americans beat UConn's fresh- tiated undefeated seasons by beating Yale and whomping Fordham in STUDENT AGENCIES men 75 to 20 here, Saturday af- double-dual track meets at Yale's Con Cage Saturday afternoon. ternoon. While the meet was The Huskies rode the record breaking performances of Pete Hdmar STUDENTS OOH'T PASS UP 7HBE SPKIUS mostly Yale's, there were a cou- (1:12.7 In the 600 yard dash), John Vitale (9:04.8 In the two mile) and ple of bright spots for UConn. Craig Conner (52 ft 81/2 In. in the shot put) In beating Yale 63 to 49 and Fordham "3 to 25. Tome Welch, freshmen co- Crate M:Coll won the mile run In 4:12, finished second to Steve SKIING captain, set the 200 yard butter- Flanagan in the 1000 yard run and ran a half mile leg of the winning WE HAVE AN ELEGANT SKI LODGE fly record of 2:12, bettering the two mile relay to give the Huskies a decided edge In the running events. time of 2d 5 held by Glen Parte- The powerful weight contingent led by AlPallwoda and Craig Conner 10 MILES FROM MT. SNOW. IN THE HEART OF low, co-captain of last years' swept all four places In the 35 lb weight throw and took one, three In varsity team. the shot put. Pallwoda won the weight throw with a 58 ft 11 In. toss. Pete Guile was second and Paul Germanowski third. THE NIGHT CLUB AREA. TWO PEOPLE IN A Welch also finished second in HUmar's 600 yard record breaks his own mark set last year by the 200 freestyle. Bob Berman 1.3 seconds. The world record Is in the vicinity of 1:09. ROOM AT $6/NIGHT PER PERSON. placed second In the 50 yard free- Vitale broke Lew Stelglltz's record, set in 1957, by four seconds. style and second in the 100 free- Rick Spurllng also broke the record and finished less than a second WE ARE OFFERING A SKI PACKAGE IN style. Diver Carl Bard placed behind Vitale. Conner jested his own shot put mark by four inches set third In the diving event with earlier in the year. SWITZERLAND ROUNDTRIP FLIGHT TO 213.5 points. Ron Evans led the fresh -non to their double victory with his record 6 ft 61/4 in. leap in the high Jump and his winning 13 ft Jump In the LUXEMBOURG AND 1 NIGHTS ACCOMODATION pole vault as the Husky freshmen scored 65 points. Yale scored 32 The freshmen swimmers are and Fordham 38. USE OF VW TWO WEEKS ACCOMODATIONS not 2-1 for the year. Other freshmen winners ware Dm Hardlsiy In the shot put, Jim Trajanowskt in the 35 lb weight, John Hutchlnso^ hurdles, Bill Parkton 60 yard dwii and Siggy Boloz, JoePorta, Jim V-irdon and Bob Ded-n-er AT CHALET VAGABOUND, LEYSIN, SWITZERLAND com".>ined to win the two mile reliy. BREAKFAST INCLUDED. $265 FOR THOSE WHO LOVE FUN IN THE SUN WE HAVE A BUS TRIP TO FLORIDA DURING INTERSESSION. PRICE $51 WE ALSO HAVE A SPECIAL GROUP FLIGHT TO EUROPE DURING INTERSESSION. ROUND TRIP TO LUXEMBOURG $150 JAN. 19-23, JAN. 30-FEB.l, FEB. 13-15 FEB.27-MARCH 1, MARCH 13-15, MARCH 23-29, APRIL 10-12, APRIL 17-19 AND WEEKNIGHTS BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT.

Groups and Couples Welcomed REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO GIVE SENIORS AND GRADUATES COMPLETE DETAILS ON Sidney Adler Manager ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES WITH THE PIONEER AND LEADING MANUFACTURER OF VTOL AIRCRAFT Barry Berman Asst. Manager See your College Placement Office now for an appointment on:

David Cooper Student Senator - President THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5

SIKORSKY AIRCRAFT, Stratford, Conn. • Division of United Aircraft Corp. • An Equal Opportunity Employer Huskies Trip B.C. 77-72 For Fourth Win DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Mondoy, Dec 15, 1969 McCrocklin's 22 Points Sparks Victory

By MARK REARICK

Chalk up tour In a row tor a bulge of 30-24, with Boyd conds showing on the clock. He Coach Dee Rowe and his lucky keying the fast break. But after then missed his second shot, but suit. It the present trend con- an exchange of hoops, BC ripped the ball bounced out of bounds tinues, his yellow and gold en- off eight straight points and left off a BC player, and UConn had semble may wear through before the court at halftime leading 34- the ball back again. Staak was it's shed In defeat. 32. fouled in a desperation move by The latest success was an The first eight minutes of the BC, but he made both parts of a electrifying 77-72 victory over second half was marked by ex- one-and-one to Ice the game at Boston College here Saturday tremely close play with the lead 77-72. night before an overflow crowd changing hands three times In ad- Staak with 17 points, Boyd 02) of 4,490 erased fans. dition to the score being tied 6 and Taylor (12) were other Hus- Instrumental in the first times. kies In double figures. Hru- UConn win over BC since 1965 With the score 52-50 In UC- bala and 11 rebounds to lead was Tom McCrocklln who played onn's favor, the Huskies lipped UConn while Tom Veronneau led «a super game" according to off nine straight points to take BC with 13. Overall UConn out- Rowe. He hit an incredible 9 an eleven point lead, the largest rebounded BC as a team, 44-32. of 11 shots from the floor and a of the night by either team. This Once again UConn shot 50% from perfect 4 tor 4 from the line to key surge saw five different men the floor, hitting 31 of 62, though finish with a game high of 22 score as Tom McCrocklln hit from they only shot 60% from the line. points. the floor, Hrubala converted a But, as coach Rowe pointed out The Huskies got off to a shaky foul shot, and Boyd, Taylor and later, They were good when it start as BC shot Into a 5-0 lead. Staak canned baskets. counted." BC scored 47.6% of UConn (ought back to tie it at At this point UConn started their floor shots and were 75% five on baskets by Ron Hrubala to slow down and play close to from the free-throw line. and Rob Taylor and a foul shot the vest. With 1:45 to play the Attitude Is an Important as- by Bobby Boyd. The rest of UConn lead had shrunk to 71- pect of Rowe's game, and he the frantic first half featured 68. Boyd then converted both feels that with the right attitude UConn's fast break, or as It's ends of a one-and-one situation. a team can win games that it becoming known, the ■Wild West BC's Jim O'Brien popped a normally shouldn't. Rlglil >i-iw, Show". This lack of a pattern- Jumper to make it 73-70, and with he says, these kids won't let ed offensive style caused some thirty-one seconds left Boyd hit anyone beat them*. post-game consternation on Hie another clutch foul shot. BC's The next game Is Tuesday at part of Coach Rowe who would like Pete Sollenne hit to close the Amherst against a very tough A tight defense it a key fac- to Instill a little more discipline gap to 74-72 with only twenty- UMass team, when the team, Reach For tor for any team. Steve Koski in his young run and shoot club. three seconds to play. Taylor coach Rowe, and the lucky gold forms an impenetrable barrier This style of play resulted In then scored a crucial foul shot suit will be out to make It five for this Boston College hoop- the largest lead of the first half. to make It 75-72 with twelve knjfrow. The Sky ster. Erving To Lead UMass Vs. UConn The "I" in IRS could be you!

Jumping Julius Erving, a 6-5 sophomore who set a UME.JS sin- gle game rebounding record with 28 against Providence and 5-11 floorman John Betanconrt are newcomers In the Massachusetts starting array. Six-tour senior Dennis Chapman and 6-1 senior Ray Ellerbrook as well as 6-7 Junior Ken Mathlas are retrunees from the championship club of last year. Erving averages 24 points, Ellerbrook 19, Mathlas 10.9, Chapman 9.2 and Betancourt 8.0. Connecticut was In a three- way tie tor fourth place In the Yankee Conference race which was won by the Bay Staters last winter when Coach Jack Lea- man's cagesters whipped the Huskies by 80 to 66 and 85-70. :WKtfc VfKttW COUNT Y CENTERf FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26 I ONE SHOW ONLY- 8:30 PM

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'•.••■•■•<.'»'.'%...'».'. i . t . i ,w«v« DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 Burbach And Woolsey Vault Freshman To 92-86 Overtime Win vs. B.C.; 5th Win

By ALAN BARTH

Lee Barbach*s^am?-tyingl5 game with strng rebounding on two more fou! shots for a foot jump shot with one 3eco.id and mimerojs tap-ins, sending 90-84 bulge, but the feat was left In regulation and BUI Wool- B.C. nto a T.9-39 lie at the 12:20 duplicated by Prince of B.C. sey's six overtime points led mark. Boston established a nor- Jim Berardlnelll rank a cor- the unbeaten Hjsky freshmen to row lead unMl Began and Parsons ner jump shot to give UConn its a come.from I ehind 92-86 win locked things up at 68 all with 92-86 win. over Bosion College. 9:21 to go. Again the nip and The play of the two lialves tuck continued as BC led f-0- 19 of regular time was nip and tuck at the one m'mte mark. A all the way with eacn team hol- UConn foul gave Don MidAloon We're ding slight margins throughout. a 1 and 1 situation of which he The Huskies surged to a 15-9 sunk only the firs! to hand the lead in the first half but BC Eagles a slim "1-79 lead with Unbeatable roared back on the baskets of Tom 18 seconds left. UConn work- Anstett and Don MccAloontolead ad the ball around for the best 21-15. However, UConn was still shot at the ouzzer and *lth the Too! in the ballgame and closed dw closk reading :02, Lee Barbach gap to 28-24 on hoops by R:ch pumped a perfect jumper to send Hennessey, Lee Barbach (2) and the game into overtime. The Frosh team, (•cs.tstic a foul shot by Rich Begen. With Lee Barbach tool: charge with 2:56 to go in the half, the Hus- a basket at 4:56 to .nake the at the moment ot victory) had kies opened a 41-31 margin with score read 83-81 , UConn. Pit Barbach a.id Bob Parsons pav- DeVries blocked on Eagle shot had just pulled one out of the ing the way and by the half, which UConn took downcourt for UConn led 47-38. The torrid an eventual basket . Bill Wool- (ire (or their 5th straight win. zone defense seem?l to be the sey produced he next Husky hoop with 2:00 to go and an 86-81 difference In the first half as They tied it up at the last sec- Boston was forced into many advantage for the Pup-3 followed turnovers which ended jp In U- by Woolsey's two free throws ond and won with over time. Conn points. and an 8K-82 lead. Boston Co- The second half again saw ;>oth llege's Bob Smith then came jp teams trading the lead and play with two i'ree throws and with Track Teams Smash Four carried on tightly. Tom Anstett :52 left, UConn's lead was cut and Dave Frietag led the Eagles to 33-84. With only a half- Welch Stars mJnute to go, Woolsey connected In a surge to get back into the In Swim Loss Marks; Beat Yale, Fordham

UCONN Yale's freshmen swim team, sporting a gaudy total of 10 All- UConi's record smashing Varsity and freshmon track teams ini- Americans beat UConn's fresh- tiated undefeated seasons by beating Yale and whomplng Fordham In STUDENT AGENCIES men 75 to 20 here, Saturday af- double-dual track meets at Yale's Coxe Cage Saturday afternoon. ternoon. While the meet was The Huskies rode th9 record breaking performances of Pete Hilmar STUDIHTS DON'T PASS UP MSt SPECIALS mostly Yale's, there were a cou- (1:12.7 in the 600 yard dash), John Vitale (9:04.8 in the two mile) and ple of bright spots for UConn. Cralg Conner (52 ft 81/2 In. in the shot put) in beating Yale 63 to 49 and Fordliam 53 to 25. Tome Welch, freshmen co- Cralg M:Coll won the mile run In 4:12, finished second to Steve SKIING captain, set the 200 yard butter- Flanagan In the 1030 yard run and ran a half mile leg of the winning WE HAVE AN ELEGANT SKI LODGE fly record of 2:12, bettering the two mile relay to give the Huskies a decided edge in the running events. time of 2:15 held by Glen Parte- The powerful weight contingent led by AlPallwoda and Cralg Conner low, cc-captaln of last years' swept all four places In the 35 lb weight throw and took one, three in 10 MILES FROM MT. SNOW. IN THE HEART OF varsity team. the shot put. Paliwoda won the weight throw with a 58 ft 11 in. toss. Pete Gi-lle was second and Paul Germauowski third. THE NIGHT CLUB AREA. TWO PEOPLE IN A Welch also finished second In Hilmar's 600 yard record breaks his own mark set last year by the 200 freestyle. Bob Berman 1.3 seconds. The world record Is in the vicinity of 1:09. ROOM AT $6/NIGHT PER PERSON. placed second In the 50 yard free- Vitale broke Lew Steiglltz's record, set in 1957, by tour seconds. style and second In the 100 free- Rick Spurling also broke the record and finished less than a second WE ARE OFFERING A SKI PACKAGE IN style. Diver Carl Bard placed behind Vitale. Conner jested his own shot put mark by four Inches set third In the diving event with earlier in the year. SWITZERLAND ROUNDTRIP FLIGHT TO Ron Evans led the freshmen to their double victory with his record 213.5 points. 6 ft 61/4 in. leap !n the high Jump and his winning 13 ft Jump in the LUXEMBOURG AND 1 NIGHTS ACCOMODATION pole vault as the Hjsky freshmen scored 65 points. Yale scored 32 The freshmen swimmers are and Fordham 38. not 2-1 for the year. Other freshmen winners were Dan Hardisiy in the snot put, Jim USE OF VW TWO WEEKS ACCOMODATIONS Trajanowskl In the 35 lb weight, John Hutchlnson, hurdles, Bill Parkton 60 yard di3h and Slggy Boloz, JoePorta, Jim V'jrdon and Bob Ded^rer AT CHALET VAGABOUND, LEYSIN, SWITZERLAND. combined ;o win the two mile rel \y. BREAKFAST INCLUDED. $265 FOR THOSE WHO LOVE FUN IN THE SUN WE HAVE A BUS TRIP TO FLORIDA DURING INTERSESSION. PRICE $51 WE ALSO HAVE A SPECIAL GROUP FLIGHT TO EUROPE DURING INTERSESSION. ROUND TRIP TO LUXEMBOURG $150 JAN. 19-23, JAN. 30-FEB.l, FEB. 13-15 FEB.27-MARCH 1, MARCH 13-15, MARCH 23-29, APRIL 10-12, APRIL 17-19 AND WEEKNIGHTS BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT.

Groups and Couples Welcomed REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO GIVE SENIORS AND GRADUATES COMPLETE DETAILS ON Sidney Adler Manager ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES WITH THE PIONEER AND LEADING MANUFACTURER OF VTOL AIRCRAFT Barry Berman Asst. Manager See your College Placement Office now for an appointment on:

David Cooper Student Senator - President THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5

SIKORSKY AIRCRAFT, Stratford, Conn. • Division of United Aircraft Corp. • An Equal Opportunity Employer Hmkies Trip B.C. 77-72 For Fourlh Win DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec. 15, 1969 McCrocklin's 22 Points Sparks Victory

By MARK REARICK

Chalk up tour In a row tor a bulge of 30-24, with Boyd conds showing on the clock. He Coach Dee Rowe and his lucky keying the fast break. But after then missed his second shot, but suit. If the present trend con- an exchange of hoops, BC ripped the ball bounced out of bounds tinues, his yellow and gold en- off eight straight points and left off a BC player, and UConn had semble may wear through before the court at halftlme leading 34- the ball back again. Staak was it's shed In defeat. 32. fouled in a desperation move by The latest success was an The first eight minutes of the BC, but he made both parts of a electrifying 77-72 victory over second half was marked by ex- one-and-one to ice the game at Boston College here Saturday tremely close play with the lead 77-72. utght before an overflow crowd changing hands three times in ad- Staak with 17 points, Boyd 02) of 4,490 crazed fans. dition to the score being tied 6 and Taylor (12) were other Hus- Instrumental In the first times. kies In double figures. Hru- DConn win over BC since 1965 Wim the score 52-50 in UC- bala and 11 rebounds to lead was Tom McCrocklin who played onn's favor, the Huskies ripped UConn while Tom Veronneau led «a super game" according to off nine straight points to take BC with 13. Overall UConn out- Rowe. He hit an Incredible 9 an eleven point lead, the largest rebounded BC as a team, 44-32. of 11 shots from the floor and a of the night by either team. This Once again UConn shot 50% from perfect 4 for 4 from the line to key surge saw five different men the floor, hitting 31 of 62, though finish with a game high of 22 score as Tom McCrocklin hit from they only shot 60% from the line. points. the floor, Hrubala converted a But, as coach Rowe pointed out The Huskies got off to a shaky foul shot, and Boyd, Taylor and later, They were good when It start as BC shot Into a 5-0 lead. Staak canned baskets. counted." BC scored 47.6% of UConn fought back to tie it at At this point UConn started their floor shots and were 75% five on baskets by Ron Hrubala to slow down and play close to from the free-throw line. and Rob Taylor and a foul shot the vest. With 1:45 to play the Attitude is an Important as- by Bobby Boyd. The rest of UConn lead had shrunk to 71- pect of Rowe's game, and he the frantic first half featured 68. Boyd then converted both feels that with the right attitude UConn's fast break, or as It's ends of a one-and-one situation. a team can win games that it becoming known, the "W1W West BC's Jim O'Brien popped a normally shouldn't. Riglu 'i«rw, Show". This lack of a pattern- Jumper to make It 78-70, and with he says, "these kids won't let ed offensive style caused some thirty-one seconds left Boyd hit anyone beat them". post-game consternation on the another clutch foul shot. BC's The next game Is Tuesday at part of Coach Rowe who would like Pete Sollenne hit to close the Amherst against a very tough A tight defense i* a key fac- to Instill a little more discipline gap to 74-72 with only twenty- UMass team, when the team, Reach For tor for any team. Steve Koski in his young run and shoot club. three seconds to play. Taylor coach Rowe, and the lucky gold forms an impenetrable barrier This style of play resulted In then scored a crucial foul shot suit will be out to make It five for this Boston College hoop- the largest lead of the first half. tojjf row. The Sky to make It 75-72 with twelve star. Erving To Lead UMass Vs. UConn The "I" in IRS could be you!

Jumping Julius Erving, a 6-5 sophomore who set a UMc.ss sin- gle game rebounding record with 28 against Providence and 5-11 doorman John Betancourt are newcomers In the Massachusetts starting array. Six-four senior Dennis Chapman and 6-1 senior Ray E Her brook as well as 6-7 junior Ken M&thlas are retrunees from the championship club of last year. Erving averages 24 points, Ellerbrook 19, Mathlas 10.9, Chapman 9.2 and Betancourt 8.0. Connecticut was In a three- way tie for fourth place in the Yankee Conference race which was won by the Bay Staters last winter when Coach Jack Lea- man's cagesters whipped the Huskies by 80 to 66 and 85-70.

: VV«tfcWt§tW COUNT* YCENTEFt- FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26 I ONE SHOW ONLY-8:30 PM

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i .i i • »V» » « * i » »i I i I • I • •'» kiWWv S DAILY CAMPUS SECTION I Monday, Dec 15, 1969 UConn Basketball Ticket Policies; Where Are You Holiday Quaker City Tournament Going With That Students wishing to purchase gotten at the field House ticket Mort action from Saturday s tickets tor UConn basketball for office tor 1/2 price with a U- now through the holidays should ConnlDcard. Tickets tor games act now. For the UMass game, on Dec. 29 and 30 can only be defeat of B. C. shows Bob at UMass, on Tues. the 16th, purchased there. the student tickets are 1.25 and The Huskies play Manhattan, Staak straining to defend a- non-students 2.50; only a few are here, on Tues. Dec. 23 and tick- left Tickets for Holy Cross, ets are available now through gainst number 21. Ho is caught at Holy Cross, on Sat. the gamntime. 20th , can be purchased this On Tues., Jan. 6, tickets for in mid air but the B. C. man's Tuesday or Wednesday. the last five home games go on UConn is entering the Oiaker sale. You are advised to get shoulder makes a convenient, City tournament, at Philadelphia, your tickets early as the good Pa. starting with Villanova on seats have been going extremely (and illegal) handle to use for Dec. 27. Normally the tickets fast leverage. are $4 and $5 but they can be ISSUE(S) MISNUMBERED NO(S).

SHOULD BE

NO(S). (oO